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Vol. 33, No.50
-FREEwww.advocatenews.net
Free
Every Friday
Council supports
purchase of air quality
sensors for ward 5
By Barbara Taormina
T
he City Council did not hesitate
to support Ward 5 Councillor
John Powersâ€™ proposal that
the city spend $23,000 for three
air quality sensors to be installed
in ward 5.
Ward 5 Councillor-elect Angela
Guarino-Sawaya thanked
Powers for the motion and
urged the council to pass it.
Sawaya told councillors that
Beachmont, Point of Pines and
Riverside are neighborhoods
overburdened with multiple
sources of pollution. The monitors
will provide a better picture
of the amount and type of pollution
putting the health of residents
at risk. Sawaya said pollution
from the airport, WIN Waste
Innovations and nearby roadways
needs to be measured and
assessed so the community can
explore mitigation strategies.
â€œThe time for delay has come
JOHN POWERS
Ward 5 Councillor
PURCHASE | SEE Page 5
781-286-8500
Friday, December 15, 2023
Revere celebrates Hanukkah
at Menorah Lighting Ceremony
FIRST LIGHT: Ward 2 City Councillor/event host Ira Novoselsky explains the meaning of the
lighting of the menorah to the attendees at the annual city hall ceremony on Wednesday. See
page 6 for photo highlights. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino)
Santa and his elf, Mayor-Elect
Keefe, delivers Christmas gifts
By Tara Vocino
S
anta and his elf, MayorElect
Patrick Keefe Jr., delivered
Christmas gifts at Immaculate
Conception Parish, Revere
Housing Authority, For Kids
Only, and First Congregational
Church on Wednesday afternoon.
Donations were made by
Amazon, the Carpenters Union,
and community members.
GIFTS | SEE Page 18
School officials work
with city, Board of
Health to ensure
students' safety
By Steve Freker
Youssef Harar accepted a
gift from Santa and his elf,
Mayor-Elect Patrick Keefe
Jr., on Wednesday at Revere
Housing Authority.
R
evere school officials have
addressed incidents of a bed
bug breakout in local schools
by employing increased professional
cleaning and outreach to
parents of schoolchildren both
in the aff ected schools and also,
districtwide, according to an online
report.
According to reports, school
officials said there have been
three separate incidents in which
bed bugs or bed bug bites were
found on students over the last
two weeks. In a letter sent to
school staff , parents and caretakers,
Revere Assistant Superintendent
Richard Gallucci said
the school district discussed the
three situations with the Revere
Board of Health.
School officials confirmed
any classroom where bed bugs
were present was professionalSAFETY
| SEE Page 14
SPIRIT OF GIVING: Shown at right, Associate Pastor Joel Varghese, Nursery Director Nicolette, Loralei
Loranzo and Pastor Tim Bogertman accepted donations on behalf of First Congregational
Church. Shown at left, Business Representative Hector Rivera, of the North Atlantic States Regional
Council of Carpenters Union. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino)
Revere school parents are being asked to check their studentsâ€™
backpacks for signs of bed bugs after a breakout in three instances
the past two weeks, according to an online report. (Courtesy Photo)
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://glwAkVxsZPYQghhU6yTD59-9lY8mCZkRtnw4BVVcAqsÍ2SÍ`Ì°Í ×e{‚hË÷@î÷ôY×e{‚hË÷@î÷ôXÍ
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2023
Pro soccer to Everett? Do not bet against it just yet,
despite delays and setbacks
Everett state Sen. DiDomenico tells City Councillors he will fi le solo bill requesting land status change
By Steve Freker
T
he need for a land status
change on a 43-acre undeveloped
site on lower Broadway
remains, despite a recent
setback regarding a land status
change that could potentially
site a $600 million, 25,000-seat
professional soccer stadium in
Everett. That was the message
from state Sen. Sal DiDomenico
(D-Middlesex and Suff olk) delivered
to the members of the Everett
City Council Monday night,
telling them â€œsomething specialâ€
â€“ soccer stadium or not â€“ is destined
for that land parcel, if the
state agrees to lift the existing
designation from the property.
At present, the land, one of
the largest undeveloped parcels
remaining in Everett, has
a state-mandated Designated
Port Area (DPA) attached to it,
meaning any development project
has to be related to the adjacent
waterfront port of the Mystic
River. Sen. DiDomenico also
told the Council the DPA status is
holding back the city of Everett
from â€œrealizing the benefi ts that
a remediation (and redevelopment)
project could generate.â€
DiDomenico on Monday reiterated
his previous pledge to
fi le a solo bill at the State House
that would contain language
to remove the DPA status from
the parcel, potentially clearing a
path to initiate construction of a
soccer stadium and waterfront
park along the Mystic River. The
new stadium, if built, would be
the home of the New England
Revolution, which now sits at
less than half-empty, 68,000seat
Gillette Stadium for home
games in Foxboro. The standalone
bill that Sen. DiDomenico
said he will fi le will include
the same language that lawmakers
left out of the $3.1 billion
budget bill Gov. Maura Healey
signed last week.
Sen. DiDomenico told the
Council he intends to â€œopen up
more opportunities for the public
to weigh in on the propertyâ€™s
future.â€ â€œAs the state senator for
The site of the proposed $600 million
professional soccer stadium and waterfront
park, a 43-acre parcel which includes
a former power plant (Courtesy Photo)
this community who strongly
believes that we can do something
special on that land, I am
going to fi le that bill,â€ Sen. DiDomenico
said at the meeting, acOur
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~ Attorneys at Law ~
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14 Norwood Street
Everett, MA 02149
Phone: (617) 387-4900 Fax: (617) 381-1755
WWW.JMACKEYLAW.COM
Chris - 2023
cording to an online report. â€œI am
going to make sure we have all
of our ducks in a row to make
sure and convince the people at
the State House that the city of
Everett doesnâ€™t want this industrial
past to continue.â€
Sen. DiDomenico said the soccer
stadium/waterfront park
project would be â€œtransformational,
not just for the environmental
aspects of it but the economic
impact of this community
as well.â€
The Mass. Senate had backed
the proposalâ€™s inclusion in the
supplemental budget, DiDomenico
said, with the House ultimately
removing the language
from advancing as lawmakers
focused on the migrant crisis
and pay raises for public employees
at the last minute, with
some House members weighing
in, citing â€œunanswered questions.â€
Some top-level House
members called concerns from
â€œseveral environmental groupsâ€
regarding unresolved environmental
concerns about the
siteâ€ as a factor in bypassing the
amendment on the land status
designation.
Sen. DiDomenico then made
a key point, saying that it was
those very same environmental
groups â€“ not Everett Mayor
Carlo DeMaria â€“ who had gone
through talks with The Kraft
Group, which owns Gillette Stadium
and The Revolution, due
to the intensive remediation
that would be needed on the
heavily contaminated land parcel
due to former industrial use.
The Kraft Group, owner Robert
Kraftâ€™s holding company, is looking
to move the New England
Revolution from Gillette Stadium
closer to Boston.
â€œI am going to continue to
advocate to state leaders that a
lower income, minority-majority
community like Everett deserves
the chance to explore
such a transformational economic
development opportunity,â€
Mayor Carlo Demaria said
this week, in support of DiDomenico's
pledge.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://kav4flFEzLKZDoz1-k91pZpImwKWiUi1c9KRSKxtKM8Í0Í`Ì°Í ×e{‚hË÷@î÷ôZ×‰EÚtTHE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2023
Page 3
~ CIT Y COUNCIL ROUNDUP ~
By Barbara Taormina
Council approves request for Oak
Island Playground rubber surfacing
The City Council supported Ward 5 Councillor
John Powersâ€™ motion to request the mayor to
submit an appropriation request to the council
from the Community Improvement Trust Fund
for an amount to be determined for the purposes
of resurfacing the Oak Island Playground with
a handicap accessible, rubberized surface.
â€œThe people of Oak Island deserve this,â€ said
Powers, who added that itâ€™s the only playground
in the city without a rubberized surface.
Powers explained that it was something thatâ€™s
poured in, not something you can lift and take
out.
â€œIf this saves one child from being injured, itâ€™s
money well spent,â€ Powers told fellow councillors.
Councillor-at-Large Gerry Visconti said he
thought this was on the previous administrationâ€™s
to-do list. â€œQuite a few kids use that park
and it would be a shame if we were not proactive
about this,â€ said Visconti.
Councillor-at-Large Marc Silvestri asked if he
could amend the motion. Silvesti said he had
spoken with Ralph DiCicco, chairman of the cityâ€™s
commission on disabilities, and DiCicco asked if
the Paul Revere School playground could also
be resurfaced. It currently has a surface of wood
chips, which is not ADA compliant.
Powers stressed that the money for the playground
improvements is not tax dollars but rather
funding from the Community Improvement
Trust Fund, which is money developers contribute
to the city to off set the eff ects of building in
neighborhoods.
Council, dept. head allay fear
of lead in water following
MWRA pamphlet distribution
Councillor-at-Large Marc Silvestri responded to
residentsâ€™ concerns about Mass. Water Resources
Authority (MWRA) pamphlets sent to homeowners
about the problems with lead in drinking
water. Silvestri asked that someone from the
Cityâ€™s Water and Sewer Department come and explain
the potential for lead contamination in Revere
water.
Don Ciaramella, supt. of the department, said
the Dept. of Environmental Protection required
that the pamphlets be sent out. â€œI understand they
were a little alarming,â€ said Ciaramella. â€œOur water
is supplied by the MWRA. Itâ€™s one of the best tap
waters around.â€
Ciaramella said there are six lead service lines in
the city. Revere must complete a survey of all lead
service lines by the end of the year.
â€œ I want everyone to understand our water is 99
percent lead free. Thereâ€™s no dire risk without water,â€
he told the council.
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Lawrence A. Simeone Jr.
Attorney-at-Law
~ Since 1989 ~
* Corporate Litigation
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* Construction Litigation
* Tax Lein
* Personal Injury
* Bankruptcy
* Wrongful Death
* Zoning/Permitting Litigation
300 Broadway, Suite 1, Revere * 781-286-1560
lsimeonejr@simeonelaw.net
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hË÷@î÷ô€ ÍjÍ.ÌÓ9×H¼mailto:Info@advocatenews.net××Ðˆ×‰EÚ«Page 4
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2023
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Cityâ€™s Human Rights
Commission celebrates
75th
T
Anniversary of United
Nations
By Barbara Taormina
he Human Rights Commission
marked the 75th anniversary
of the United Nations
Declaration of Universal Human
Rights at their last meeting.
The Commission then
moved into a circle discussion
about human rights and their
roles as human rights commissioners
in Revere.
The discussion did not specifi
cally address any issues or
problems in Revere, but instead
focused on larger questions,
such as what is a human
right. Commissioners agreed
that all people have a right to
essentials like food, shelter and
healthcare.
Revereâ€™s Chief of Talent and
Culture, Claudia Correa, said
she believes there are enough
resources within the city to ensure
everyone has what they
need. The problem, according
to Correa, is fi nding a way in
which people can share what
they have with those in need.
Commissioners also tackled
questions about how to approach
competing needs and
goals among groups in confl
ict, and rules, laws and decisions
that cause more harm
than good when looking to
give everyone human rights.
Throughout the discussion,
Commissioners shared how
they felt about working together
on human rights issues.
They all agreed they need to
pay close attention to community
voices and they need to be
accountable. Commission Acting
Chair Chai Hossaini said too
often much time is spent assigning
blame for a problem.
â€œWhat we need to do is fi gure
out whatâ€™s the plan going forward,â€
she said.
â€œHolding people accountable
and holding myself accountable
is important,â€ said Commissioner
Kourou Pich.
Commissioner Chris Bright,
Revere's fire chief, said being
accountable often means just
showing up. â€œI think we can be
most effective on local challenges
in our community,â€ said
Bright. â€œIâ€™m excited to think of
the younger generation coming
up in our city. They donâ€™t
have the opinions or hang-ups
of older generations. Weâ€™ll keep
making progress. Weâ€™ll use our
voices for good.â€
~ GUEST COMMENTARY ~
Antisemitism Seems To Be
Metastasizing And Getting
Excused, Too
By Sal Giarratani
T
he fact that three university
presidents including the
new president of Harvard University
are apparently afraid
to speak truth to power after
speaking before a Congressional
hearing on widespread
campus antisemitism of late,
tells us all we have to know
about the hypocrisy of the political
Left when it comes to calling
out student radicals spreading
hateful rhetoric on campus
and in anti-Jewish, pro-Hamas
rallies and marches. It makes
me both sad and angry how
so many liberals excuse these
hateful marches calling for the
end of the State of Israel â€œfrom
the river to the sea.â€
Recently, these acts of antisemitism
entered into a Winthrop
Town Council meeting. A
Zoom-based participant at the
meeting shouted an antisemitic
slur and reportedly displayed
a swastika on their screen during
discussion regarding the
townâ€™s protocol regarding the
townâ€™s fl ag policy.
Instead of entering into a civic
debate of the townâ€™s policy,
this individual used the platform
for hate speech and the
displaying of hate symbols.
More people must start speaking
up loud and clear against
acts of hate and condemn loud
and clear. People everywhere
must stand together in community
with one another in
unity to condemn hatred and
intolerance.
As Police Chief Terry Delehanty
stated, â€œThere is no place for
hate in Winthrop. Not in person,
not online, not anywhere.â€ Too
many hateful outbursts have
occurred since the Hamas attack
on Israel on October 7. I
fi nd it reprehensible that acts
of antisemitism have continued
over two months now. Israel
is now facing condemnation
by politically ignorant protesters
around the world and right
here in our own backyards.
This wave of vile rhetoric being
disseminated since October
7 is a sad reflection of
how the defi nition of being an
American has fallen in recent
times. America stands for certain
principles and today these
principles are under attack.
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate
Newspapers
at 781-286-8500 or
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×‰	Ú 7cassandra://19eCAd_5T5-_LZsmQPKulkaAyak1Rrl1S9oTXkaBCoIÍ/JÍ`Ì°Í ×e{‚hË÷@î÷ô\×‰EÚ¯THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2023
Page 5
Revere resident among 30 firefighters graduating
from Firefighting Academy
Graduates of Class #316 represent 17 Mass. fi re departments
S
tate Fire Marshal Jon M. Davine
and Massachusetts Firefi
ghting Academy (MFA) Director
Jeff rey P. Winn announced
the graduation of 30 fi refi ghters
from the 50-day Career Recruit
Firefi ghting Training Program.
Revere Firefighter Sean
Manion was among the graduating
fi refi ghters.
â€œMassachusetts fi refi ghters are
on the frontlines protecting their
communities every day, and todayâ€™s
graduates are needed now
more than ever,â€ said State Fire
Marshal Davine. â€œThe hundreds
of hours of foundational training
theyâ€™ve received will provide
them with the physical, mental,
and technical skills to perform
their jobs eff ectively and safely.â€
â€œMassachusetts Firefighting
Academy instructors draw on
decades of experience in the fi re
service to train new recruits,â€ said
MFA Director Winn. â€œThrough
consistent classroom instruction
and practical exercises, todayâ€™s
graduates have developed the
tools theyâ€™ll need to work seamlessly
with veteran fi refi ghters
in their home departments and
in neighboring communities as
mutual aid.â€
Basic fi refi ghter skills
Students receive classroom
PURCHASE | FROM Page 1
and gone,â€ said Powers.
Councillor-at-Large Anthony
Zambuto said he had no problem
with the monitors but he
wants to make sure they function
correctly. â€œI donâ€™t care if itâ€™s
three times the money, I want
accurate results,â€ he said.
Zambuto recalled a problem
with an air monitor at Gibson
Park that led to inaccurate results
being released to the public.
Â°I want high-quality, accurate
readings, not made-up stuff,â€
said Zambuto.
City Council President Pro
Tempore Joanne McKenna said
she has had a monitor in her
backyard for the past fi ve years.
Every week, students from Tufts
come and collect the data but
thatâ€™s as far as it goes. McKenna
said Massport has been studying
pollution from planes for
the past six years but results of
the study have been inconclusive.
Researchers were unable
to determine if pollutants were
For Advertising
with Results,
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call The Advocate
dv cate
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Ne Newspapersspapers
training in all basic fi refi ghter
skills. They practice fi rst under
non-fi re conditions and then
during controlled fi re conditions.
To graduate, students
must demonstrate profi ciency
in life safety, search and rescue,
ladder operations, water
supply, pump operation,
and fi re attack. Fire attack operations
range from mailbox
fi res to multiple-fl oor or multiple-room
structural fi res. Upon
successful completion of the
Career Recruit Program, all students
have met the national
standards of NFPA 1001, Standard
for Fire Fighter Professional
Qualifi cations, and are certifi
ed to the levels of Firefi ghter
I/II and Hazardous Materials
First Responder Operations by
the Massachusetts Fire Training
Council, which is accredited
by the National Board on
Fire Service Professional Qualifi
cations.
Todayâ€™s fi refi ghters do much
more than fi ght fi res
Modern fi refi ghters train for
and respond to all types of hazards
and emergencies. They are
the fi rst ones called to respond
to chemical and environmental
emergencies, ranging from
the suspected presence of carfrom
Wheelabrator (WIN Waste
Innovations), planes or vehicular
traffi c.
Ward 5 residents are particularly
concerned because a
change in flight patterns has
planes fl ying lower and closer to
homes. â€œThey are so close to my
house, I can see which snacks
theyâ€™re serving,â€ said McKenna.
The graduating fi refi ghters of Class #316 (Courtesy Photo)
bon monoxide to gas leaks to
industrial chemical spills. They
might be called to rescue a child
who has fallen through the ice,
an offi ce worker stuck in an elevator
or a motorist trapped in
a crashed vehicle. They test and
maintain their equipment, including
self-contained breathing
apparatus (SCBA), hydrants,
hoses, power tools, and apparatus.
At
the Massachusetts Firefi
ghting Academy, recruits learn
all these skills and more, including
the latest science of fi re behavior
and suppression tacChief
of Planning and Development
Tom Skwierawski responded
to Zambutoâ€™s concerns
about the equipment. â€œThe sensors
being requested are stateof
-the art, best-in-class,â€ said
Skwierawski. â€œThe purpose is to
use the data in a research-orientated
way with Northeastern
University.â€
tics, from certifi ed fi re instructors.
They also receive training
in public fi re education, hazardous
material incident mitigation,
fl ammable liquids, stress management,
and self-rescue techniques.
The intensive, 10-week
program involves classroom instruction,
physical fi tness trainGerry
Dâ€™Ambrosio
Attorney-at-Law
Is
Your Estate in Order?
Do you have an update Will, Health
Care Proxy or Power of Attorney?
If Not, Please Call for a Free Consultation.
14 Proctor Avenue, Revere
(781) 284-5657
ing, fi refi ghter skills training and
live fi refi ghting practice.
The MFA provides recruit and
in-service training for career,
call and volunteer fi refi ghters at
every level of experience, from
recruit to chief offi cer, at campuses
in Stow, Springfi eld and
Bridgewater.
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@Page 6
THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2023
Revere celebrates Hanukkah at annual City Hall
Menorah Lighting Ceremony
By Tara Vocino
T
he city celebrated Hanukkah outside of Revere City Hall on
Wednesday. Hanukkah celebrates light over darkness.
Mayor-Elect Patrick Keefe, Jr. said
light and food brings people together.
425r
Broadway, Saugus
Located adjacent to Kohls Plaza Route 1 South
in Saugus at the intersection of Walnut Street
We are on MBTA Bus Route 429
781-231-1111
We are a Skating Rink with
Bowling Alleys, Arcade and
two TVâ€™s where the ball
games are always on!
PUBLIC SKATING SCHEDULE
12-7 p.m.
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
$9.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Rollerblades/inline skates $3.00 additional cost
Private Parties
7:30-11 p.m.
$10.00
Price includes Roller Skates
Adult Night 18+ Only
Private Parties
Private Parties
4-7 p.m. $9.00
12-9 p.m.
7:30-11 p.m. $10.
18+ Adults Only After 7 PM
$9.00
Everyone must pay admission after 6 p.m.
Sorry No Checks - ATM on site
Roller skate rentals included in all prices
Inline Skate Rentals $3.00 additional
BIRTHDAY & PRIVATE PARTIES AVAILABLE
www.roller-world.com
Rabbi Lior Nevo lights the eighth
candle. Rabbi Nevo said the oil creates
light, which lasts eight days.
State Representative Jessica Giannino said Hanukkah is
about miracles and family. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
Temple Tiferet Israel in Winthrop
Rabbi Ben Flax said the Maccabees lit
a menorah to rededicate the temple.
Rabbi Sruli Baron lights the seventh
candle.
Rabbis Lior Nevo, Sruli Baron and Ben Flax alongside Ward
1 City Councillor Ira Novoselsky off ered their blessing.
State Representative Jeff rey Turco
gave a moment of silence for soldiers
who died defending Israel.
Inez and Joseph Cole with a menorah
headband.
Elected offi cials and others by the menorah, shown from
left to right: Robert Haas, Angela Guarino-Sawaya, Marc
Silvestri, Michelle Kelley, Joanne McKenna, Rabbi Sruli Baron,
Rabbi Ben Flax, Rabbi Lior Nevo, Patrick Keefe Jr., Jeffrey
Turco, Ira Novoselsky, Jessica Giannino, Anthony Zambuto,
Anthony Caggiano, Paul Argenzio, John Kingston and
Steven Morabito.
Shown from left to right: Ward 5 City Councillor-Elect Angela
Guarino-Sawaya, Nancy Monkiewicz, Eleanor Viera, Kathleen
Brennan, Denise Rampelberg, Mary Vigliotta, Linda
Doherty, Karen Knapp, Maria Margada, Josephine Piccardi
and City Council President Pro Tempore Joanne McKenna.
To all who celebrate, may your
Hanukkah î…îˆ î†“îîîˆî‡ îšîŒî—î‹ îîŒîŠî‹î— î„î‘î‡ îî’î™îˆî€‘
100 Salem Turnpike, Saugus, MA 01906
WINWASTESAUGUS.COM
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Page 7
î€¬î„‚î†‰î†‰î‡‡ î€’î…šî„‚î…¶î†µî…¬î„‚î…šîŠ î„î„‚î‡‡ î‡‡î…½î†µî†Œ î…¯î…î„¨î„ž î„î„ž î„®î…¯î…¯î„žî„š î‡î…î†šî…š î†šî…šî„ž î…¯î…î…î…šî†š î…½î„¨ î„î„žî…¶î…½î†Œî„‚î…š î„î„‚î…¶î„šî…¯î„žî†î˜
State Representative State Representative
Jessica Giannino
& Family
School Board Member
Carol
TyTyee
Councillor-at-Large
Anthony
Zambuto
Ward 4ard 4 Councillor Councillor
ElectElect
Paul
Argenzio
Have a Blessed & Happy Chanukah
î‰î•î’î î—î‹îˆ î€¶î—î„î¯º î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ
î€µ î€¹î€¨î€µî€¨î€¹î€¨ î€¨î€¨î€¹ î€µî€¨
Ward 2 Councillor
Ira
Novoselsky
School Board Member
Michael
Ferrante
&
Family
School Committeeman-Elect
Anthony
Caggiano
State Representative
î€­îˆï‚‡î•îˆîœ î€·î˜î•î†î’
& Family
Ward 6 ard 6
Councillor-Elect Councillor-Elect
Christopher
Giannino
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2023
Annual Coats for Kids donates to the less fortunate
By Tara Vocino
M
ayor-Elect Patrick Keefe, Revere Firefi ghter Matthew Parlante
and Michael DiGangi organized the Coats For Kids drive at
Dryft Revere last Thursday night.
Shown from left to right: Dryft Revere owner Michael Aldi, event
co-organizer Matt Parlante, Jennifer Keefe and co-organizer Pat
Keefe.
Shown from left to right: Ward 1 Councillor Ira Novoselsky, Deputy Fire Chief Sean Manion, event
co-organizer Matt Parlante, Ward 5 City Councillor-Elect Angela Guarino-Sawaya, event co-organizer
Mayor Patrick Keefe, State Representative Jessica Giannino, Local 926 Union President Captain
Kevin Oâ€™Hara, Firefi ghter Charles Fusco, Firefi ghter Gerard Festa, Lt. Leonard DiBartolomeo,
Lt. Michael Conley, Firefi ghter Jordan Bohannon and Deputy Fire Chief Michael DiCarlo.
Shown from left to right: Everett Police Sergeant Brian Herbert,
Revere Police Sergeant Joseph Internicola, Revere Recreation Director
Michael Hinojosa and Revere Mayor Patrick Keefe.
Vanessa Biasella with her husband, Michael School Committee member John Kingston donated
a coat from St. Jeanâ€™s Credit Union and another
one on his own.
Shown from left to right: Deputy Fire Chief Michael DiCarlo, Firefi
ghter Jordan Bohannon, Fire Lt. Michael Conley and Anthony
Parziale.
Shown from left to right: Richard Bosworth, cohost Matthew
Parlante and Councillor-at-Large Steven Morabito.
Shown from left to right: Deb Peczka DiGiulio, James Nigro and
Patrick Keefe.
Ken Gould donated during last Thursdayâ€™s
Coats for Kids drive at Dryft Revere.
Natalia
and Michael Zaccaria wore festive sweaters.
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Page 9
RevereTV
Spotlight
T
The cityâ€™s First Lady, Jennifer, and Mayor Patrick Keefe, Jr.
he Annual Robert A. Marra
Sounds of Christmas ConShown
from left to right: Ward 5 City Councillor-Elect Angela Guarino-Sawaya,
Ward 1 City Councillor/City Council President Pro
Tempore Joanne McKenna and Felicia Napolitano.
cert by the North Shore Philharmonic
Orchestra (NSPO) is
this upcoming weekend! RTV
has been pushing the holiday
tunes on the Community Channel
and will continue to leading
up to Sunday. You can watch a
Sounds of Christmas Concert
from years past dating back to
2012 once per day at noon until
this yearâ€™s concert. The NSPO
will once again perform holiday
carols at St. Anthonyâ€™s Church
at 4 p.m. on Sunday, December
17. This concert is a multi-camera
shoot that is a full-team effort
to stream live on RevereTV
and RTVâ€™s YouTube page. The
concert is also a food drive, so
attendees are asked to donate
nonperishable food items upon
entering. If you are a cable subscriber,
watch it live on television
on Comcast channels 8
and 1072, and RCN channels 3
and 614.
Get in the holiday spirit by
Vanessa Mariscal and event co-organizer Matt Parlante
watching a full 20-minute highlight
reel of this yearâ€™s Annual
Priscilla Nickerson Memorial
Santa Walk and Tree Lighting
at City Hall. This celebration included
a walking parade from
Revere High School to City Hall,
pictures with Santa, live music,
vendors, mini horses, cookie
and ornament decorating and
a holiday movie on the American
Legion Lawn. RTV volunteer
youth reporter Manique
gives her input and interviews
Mayor-Elect Patrick Keefe, Ward
2 City Councillor Ira Novoselsky
and other community members
enjoying all the festivities from
last weekend. This program has
been shortened and posted to
RevereTVâ€™s Instagram page. Follow
RTV on Instagram for quick
updates and footage from all
Revere students
achieve St. Maryâ€™s
High School Term 1
Honors
S
t. Maryâ€™s High School announces
its Honor Roll and
Principalâ€™s List for the fi rst quarter
of the 2022-23 academic
year. Honor Roll students
must achieve 85 or above in
all of their classes. Students
earning Principalâ€™s List status
must achieve 90 or above in
all of their classes. The following
students from Revere have
achieved these honors:
Principalâ€™s List
Kyle Cash â€™29
Luka DeAlmeida â€™28
Anthony Ferragamo â€™28
Justin Cavalcanti â€™27
Santiago Gil Perez â€™27
Kendra Lenci â€™27
Lorena Silveira â€™27
things covered by the studio.
â€œThe Game of the Weekâ€ series
started this week on the RevereTV
Community Channel. The
studio will try to cover at least
one Revere High School basketball
game every week throughout
this season. The â€œGame of
the Weekâ€ will be either a boys
or a girls team game. The fi rst
game of the series, which is
now replaying on RevereTV, is
the RHS girls game against Lynn
Classical. Games covered by RTV
will play live on the Community
Channel, stream live on YouTube
and replay on television for
the week following each game.
Game coverage posted to YouTube
may be listed as private after
the livestream until the end
of the season. Next week, tune
in for the boys basketball team
as they play Medford at home
Alexis Kane â€™26
Gabriella Polidoro â€™26
Jason Spaulding â€™26
Felipe Velez Londono â€™26
Conlan Buckley â€™25
Carolina Toranzo â€™25
Jack Zimmerman â€™25
Christopher Lutchman â€™24
Honor Roll
Maya Olivia â€™30
James Ridley â€™28
Susana Toranzo â€™27
Sabrina Fazio â€™26
Grace Fox â€™26
Zachary Guelpa â€™26
Emilia Papalambros â€™26
Santiago Ramirez â€™26
Mia DeVoe â€™25
Isabella Mogavero â€™24
on Tuesday at 6 p.m.
The current Revere City Council
will meet for the last time this
year on Monday, December 18
at 6 p.m. The new City Council
will be sworn in after the new
year. However, that is not the
last meeting of 2023. Meetings
will continue throughout next
week, including the License
Commission, Zoning Board of
Appeals and Traffic Commission.
All meetings next week will
stream live on RTV GOV and YouTube
and then replay in the following
weeks through the holidays.
After next week, RTV GOV
will be scheduled with replays
of local government meetings
from the month of December.
Tune in to RTV GOV on Comcast
channel 9 or RCN channels
3 and 613 to watch all meetings
covered by RevereTV.
Amanda Bonasoro with Kori Oâ€™Hara
Coats were collected in a pile. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2023
Meet the 2024 RHS Patriots Girlsâ€™ Basketball Teams
By Tara Vocino
W
ith basketball starting this week, the Revere High School Girlsâ€™ Patriots Basketball
freshman, junior varsity and varsity teams introduced themselves on Sunday
morning at Revere High School.
Captains, shown from left to right: Bella Stamatopoulos, Belma Velic and Haley
Belloise with Head Coach Ariana Rivera (at left) and Assistant Coach Michael
Micciche. (Advocate photo by Tara Vocino)
Junior Varsity, shown from left to right: Kneeling: Ajsi Balla, Destiny Borges-Kelley, Asmaa
Azeroual and Amy Rivas Castro; standing: Coach Elizabeth Lake, Sonia Hailey, Zohra
Benkreira, Ikram Bichou, Sarah Lechheb and Destiny Kelley with Coach Victoria Correia.
Varsity, shown from left to right: Bottom row: Assistant Coach Victoria Correira,
Assistant Coach Elizabeth Lake, Head Coach Ariana Rivera, Daniela Murillo,
Julianna Bolton, Salma Zahraoui, Rocio Gonzalez and Shayna Smith; standing:
Marwa Riad, Alisha Jean, Bella Stamatopoulos, Belma Velic, Haley Belloise,
Nisrin Sekkat and Lea Doucette with Assistant Coaches Michael Micciche
and Nicholas Canelas.
Seniors, shown from left to right: Kneeling: Bella Stamatopoulos and Haley Belloise;
standing: Head Coach Ariana Rivera, Julianna Bolton, Alisha Jean, Rocio
Gonzalez, Assistant Coach Michael Micciche.
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Page 11
MIAA votes to keep status quo in power rankings
system for State Football Tournament seedings
Everett footballâ€™s fate this year â€“ 7-1, GBL Champ and no playoffsâ€“ city as key case in call for win-loss element in seedings
By Steve Freker
he pleas from schools like Everett
High, Springfi eld Central
and others around the state
for the consideration and hopeful
addition of a win-loss element
to the MIAA State Football
Tournament seeding considerations
did not draw enough
support for change Wednesday.
At a meeting of the Tournament
Management Committee
(TMC) of the Massachusetts
Interscholastic Athletic Association
(MIAA) at MIAA headquarters
in Franklin, the members
voted, 11-5, to keep the current
state rankings policy â€“ with no
new changes.
Since its implementation in
T
the Fall 2021 season, some
coaches, athletic directors, and
administrators have been uncomfortable
with margin of victory
being a key component in
the stateâ€™s Power Ranking formula
for tournament seeding.
Suggestions were brought to
the TMC by some athletic directors
that in addition to strength
of schedule (SOS) and margin
of victory (MOV) considerations,
that a school
teamâ€™s win-loss percentage/number
of wins play
a role in determining power
rankings.
By an 11-5 vote, the TMC
voted to retain and maintain
the existing formatâ€“
without adding any winloss/win
total consideration
â€“ moving forward.
What this means straight
up locally for Everett High
football is that if the same
scenario took place next
year, a 7-1 fi nish and perhaps
even an 8-0 undefeated
record, would not
guarantee a postseason
berth once again.
The primary mitigating
factor is the existing Greater
Boston League strength
of members in the grand
scheme, with no other Division
1 teams except Everett
and subpar performances
and win-loss records
for the GBL.
â€œThe arguments against
[the existing power seedEverett
High football was #1 in the Greater
Boston League this past season, as top prospect
Christian Zamor points out, but the Crimson
Tide still could not break into the MIAA Division
1 Power Rankings Top 16. The biggest
reason was the weakness of the GBL â€“ six GBL
teams of eight Everett non-league opponents.
(Advocate Photo/Henry Huang)
ings format] working are
becoming more and more
diffi cult to come up with,â€
TMC Chair Shaun Hart,
who is Athletic Director for
Burlington Public Schools,
said at Wednesdayâ€™s meeting
in Franklin, of the current
format.
â€œThe margin of victory
piece, philosophically,
I understand thereâ€™s a difference
to it. I donâ€™t subscribe
to it, but I donâ€™t dismiss
it either,â€ the Burlington
AD added.
Behind the proposal
voted down was the intention
to lessen the importance
of MOV and SOS
in the equation; adding a
win-loss component to
the formula was put in
front of the MIAAâ€™s Tournament
Management Committee
with an eye to preventing
â€œrunning up the
scoreâ€ as one unwelcomed
derivative.
Lending collected data
to the debate, MIAA Deputy
Director Sherry Bryant
said the percentage of regular-season
games exceeding the
current cap on margin of victory
(three goals in soccer, 10 points
in basketball, 14 points in football)
has not changed since the
change to the statewide tournament
in 2021. Before the current
postseason, Bryant said, 40 percent
of basketball games were
10 points or less, and that number
has held steady the past
couple of seasons. Results from
the fall State Tournament bore
notice that the existing power
seedings were accurate, Bryant
continued, noting the higher-seeded
team won 78 percent
of the football games, 80 percent
of girls volleyball games, 80
percent of boys soccer and girls
soccer games and more than 90
MIAA | SEE Page 19
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2023
Meet the 2024 RHS Patriots Boysâ€™ Basketball Teams
W
By Tara Vocino
ith basketball starting this week, the Revere High School Boysâ€™
Patriots Basketball freshman, junior varsity and varsity teams
introduced themselves on Sunday morning at Revere High School.
Boys Varsity, shown from left to right: Standing: Sami Mghizou, Erick Mayorga, Domenic Belmonte, Ryan El
Babor, Co-Captain Andrew Leone, Amir Yamani, Co-Captain Luke Ellis, Sean Burnett, Avi Lung, Ethan Day and
Joshua Mercado; seated: Team Manager Brady Keer, Assistant Coach John Leone, Head Coach David Leary, Assistant
Coach Robert Sullivan, Assistant Coach Dennis Leary and Assistant Coach Hamza Ghoul.
Seniors, shown from left to right: At bottom are Co-Captains Luke Ellis
and Andrew Leone; standing: Ryan El Babor, Amir Yamani, Domenic Belmonte
and Coaches Robert Sullivan, John Leone and David Leary. (Advocate
photo by Tara Vocino)
Junior Varsity, shown from left to right: Head Coach John Leone, Adam Benhamou, Domenic Bellia, Seth Sullivan,
Nicholas Rupp, Noah Ramos, Devin Berry, Zaney Kayembe, Yousef Ismail, Jadrian Sanchez, Omar Attabou,
Joseph Carlo, Joseph Pinto, Isaiah Llanos, Jayden Balogun and Assistant Coaches Dennis Leary and David Leary.
Freshmen, shown from left to right: Assistant Coach Hamza Ghoul, Adnane Amime, Jeremy Pryor, Camaree
James, Ryan Raduazzo, Luca Albano, Nico Cespedes, Nathan Brown, Zayd Hamron, Matt Leone, Oliver Hernandez,
Chris Recinos, Bryan Galeano and Head Coach Robert Sullivan.
Revere girlsâ€™
basketball team drops
opener, bounces back
with buzzer-beater
I
t was a sluggish start to the
season for both the Marblehead
and Revere girlsâ€™ basketball
teams, who combined for
fi ve points in the opening quarter.
Marblehead would end up
scratching out a 34-25 win over
the Lady Patriots at home. Revere
had trouble on off ense with
only nine points in the fi rst half
but battled and trailed, 15-13,
early in the third quarter.
Haley Belloise led Revere with
eight points. Alisha Jean led the
team with nine rebounds.
â€œWe competed hard with Marblehead,â€
Revere coach Ariana
Rivera said. â€œIt was clearly a defensive
game on both ends. We
struggled to take care of the
basketball having 18 turnovers
as a team.â€
Revere bounced back this
week to get its fi rst win. Jean
drained a buzzer-beating shot,
leading Revere to a 35-34 victory
over Lynn Classical to start
the season. Jean led the Patriots
with 13 points in the teamâ€™s
home-opener.
Revere cheerleaders
gear up for
winter season
R
evere cheerleading coaches
Kayle Pezzuto and Sabrina
Sloan take their team into
this season excited for the opportunity
and upcoming competitions.
Pezzuto
cheered for three
years at Endicott College and
helped coach Danvers varsity
cheerleading in the 2019 fall
season. Sheâ€™s also in her third
year as assistant cheerleading
coach at Endicott College.
â€œI grew up in Revere and am
now teaching in Revere so itâ€™s
great being able to give back
to a community that helped
shaped me into the person I
am today,â€ Pezzuto said. â€œAlso as
a teacher, itâ€™s great being able
to continue some relationships
with past students outside of a
classroom setting.â€
Sloan cheered at Lynn English
High School and has some
coaching experience. After becoming
a teacher, Sloan said,
she knew she wanted to teach
in Revere and give back to the
community that helped shape
who she is as a person.
Revere has nearly 30 on the
winter cheerleading squad. In
the fall season, the program
won regionals and placed in the
Co-Captain Luke Ellis (at left), Head Coach David Leary and Co-Captain Andrew
Leone on Sunday morning at Revere High School.
top fi ve at states.
Asked what the teamâ€™s
strengths are, Pezzuto said its
ability to adjust and want to improve.
What
are the big team goals
this winter? â€œTo just keep improving
and getting better
with each performance,â€ Pezzuto
said.
Revere girls track
team kicks off
season in style
T
he Revere girls track team
had 11 girls compete at the
MSTCA Winter Festival as well.
â€œOverall, we saw some great
times, jumps and throws for the
fi rst invitational,â€ Revere coach
Racquel MacDonald-Ciambelli
said. â€œIt really shows how hard
the girls were working in the
off season to come back just as
strong as they ended last year.â€
Junior Liv Yuong had an outstanding
meet and placed highest
amongst all Revere athletes.
She took home fi fth overall in
the 55-meter hurdles with a
time of 10.07 and placed second
overall in the high jump
with a leap of 5-5, which qualifi
es her for the D1 state meet in
February.
Senior captain Giselle Salvador
opened up her season
in the 55-meter dash with a
PR-tying time of 8.29. Sophomore
Olivia Rupp ran the mile
in 6:09.19, which is only seven
seconds off her PR last year.
Danni Hope Randall also landed
close to her last year PR in
the 300-meter with a time of
48.31. Newcomer to indoor
track Gemma Stamatopolous
had a great fi rst meet with a
1:53 in the 600-meter and a 4-6
jump in high jump.
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Page 13
~ RHS SPORTS ROUND-UP ~
Everett/Revere/Malden/MVRC
co-op boysâ€™ hockey opens up
with win
T
he Peabody-Saugus boys
hockey team had a superfast
start in its opening-season
game on the road against Everettâ€™s
cooperative team. The Tanners
scored two goals in the fi rst
three minutes of the game to
overcome a quick Everett goal
17 seconds into the game.
It didnâ€™t faze Everett in the
least. It was all Everett from
there. The Tide netted fi ve total
goals in the fi rst period and
went on to a 9-6 win in the season-opener
for the co-op team
at Allied Veterans Memorial Rink
in Everett.
Senior Matt Lacroix of Revere
scored 17 seconds into the
game for Everett. Sophomore
Michael Brandano of Mystic
Valley got into the party in the
fi rst period with two goals that
paved the way for a hat trick.
His final goal came 5:26 into
the third period and helped
stave of Peabody-Saugusâ€™ fourgoal
comeback attempt in the
third period. Sophomore forward
Frankie Annunziata of Revere
and senior Jake Simpson of
Malden added two goals each
for the Tide in the season-opening
win. Liam Thompson of Mystic
Valley added the other goal
for Everett.
Adding assists for the Tide
were Lukas Deguire of Mystic
Valley (two), Annunziata, Michael
Brandano, Jackie Summers
of Malden (three), Lacroix
(two), Ollie Svendsen of Revere
(two), Vishant Chawla of Mystic
Valley (two) and David Perez of
Malden.
Peabody-Saugus outscored
Everett, 4-2, in the fi nal period
but it wasnâ€™t enough to overcome
the 7-2 defi cit after two
periods.
Aaron Al-Marayati of Malden
started in net for Everett.
Everett was scheduled for a
home game against Somerville
on Wednesday, Dec. 13, hosts
Medford on Saturday, Dec. 16,
Co-op team players celebrate a
goal: Pictured from left to right:
Lucas Deguire of Mystic Valley,
Frankie Annunziata of Revere
and Ollie Svenson of Revere.
at 2 p.m. then next gets on
the road on Monday, Dec. 18,
against Taunton (5 p.m.) and
Lynn on Wednesday, Dec. 20,
at 4 p.m.
Revere boys track shines
at MSTCA
Co-op team hockey player Michael Brandano (No. 21) of Mystic Valley
closes in on Peabody-Saugus goalie Evan Tybinkowski of Peabody.
Co-op
team hockey player Frankie Annunziata of Revere (No. 2) puts
one past Peabody-Saugus goalie Evan Tybinkowski.
î€·î•î„îµ¶î† î€¦î’îîîŒî–î–îŒî’î‘ î€³î˜î…îîŒî† î€«îˆî„î•îŒî‘îŠ
î€§îˆî†îˆîî…îˆî• î€•î€”î€ î€•î€“î€•î€–
Notice is hereby given in accordance with the provisions
of Chapter 185 of the Acts of 1983, and Chapter 13 of the
î€¤î†î—î– î’î‰ î€”î€œî€›î€—î€ î—î‹î„î— î—î‹îˆ î€¦îŒî—îœ î’î‰ î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆ î€·î•î„ï‚ˆî† î€¦î’îîîŒî–î–îŒî’î‘
îšîŒîî î†î’î‘î‡î˜î†î— î„ î€³î˜î…îîŒî† î€«îˆî„î•îŒî‘îŠ î’î‘ î€§îˆî†îˆîî…îˆî• î€•î€”î€ î€•î€“î€•î€– î„î—
î€˜î€î€“î€“ î“î€‘îî€‘ îŒî‘ î—î‹îˆ î€¦îŒî—îœ î€¦î’î˜î‘î†îŒîîî’î• î€­î’î–îˆî“î‹ î€¤î€‘ î€§îˆî î€ªî•î’î–î–î’
î€¦î’î˜î‘î†îŒî î€¦î‹î„îî…îˆî•î– î’î‰ î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆ î€¦îŒî—îœ î€«î„îî î•îˆîî„î—îŒî™îˆ î—î’ î—î‹îˆ
î‰î’îîî’îšîŒî‘îŠ î“î•î’î“î’î–îˆî‡ î„îîˆî‘î‡îîˆî‘î—î– î—î’ î—î‹îˆ î“î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠ î„î‘î‡ î—î•î„ï‚ˆî†
regulations of the City of Revere:
Public Hearing:
î€”î€‘ î€§îŒî–î†î˜î–î– î€¦î‹î„î“î—îˆî• î€”î€“î€‘î€–î€› î‚± î€¨îîˆî†î—î•îŒî† î€¹îˆî‹îŒî†îîˆ î€¬î‘î‰î•î„î–î—î•î˜î†î—î˜î•îˆ
î„î‘î‡ î€³î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠ î•îˆîŠî„î•î‡îŒî‘îŠî€
The Revere boys track 4x200 meter relay team,
pictured from left to right: Geo Woodard, Oliver
Escobar, Jeremy X and Yousef Benhamou.
R
evere boys track competed
at the Massachusetts State
Track Coaches Association Winter
Festivalâ€“Small Schools at the
Reggie Lewis Center in Boston
last weekend. Due to a technical
error, Revere was temporarily
moved to Division 4 but will
compete in Division 1 beginning
Sunday, Dec. 17, with the
MSTCA Speed Classicâ€“Large
Schools.
Revere coach Dave Fleming
said the team had an exceptional
number of personal records
(PRs), especially for first meet
of season. New and young performers
excelled.
In the 600 meters, JV Cunha
placed second overall. It was the
highest boysâ€™ placement of the
day. Kenan Batic had a strong
Revere boys track shot-putters, pictured from
left to right, Captains Kevin Purcifull and Allen
Hou.
second in his heat in his first
time running the 600 in an invitational
as he moves to shorter
distances. The Patriots picked
up three PRs in the 1,000 meters.
Youness Chahid placed fourth
(and fi rst in his heat) with a new
personal record of 2:50.09. â€œThis
was a breakout performance for
Youness,â€ Fleming said.
Edwin Alarcon, in his fi rst time
running the event, was fi rst in
his heat and beat a runner from
Somerville. He moved into lead
with about a lap to go, and he
looked smooth and comfortable.
â€œHe is ready to run faster,â€
Fleming said.
Mo Fares had a strong run and
a PR by seven seconds.
Revere also had three PRs in
the shotput, including two over
40 feet. Allen Hou set a PR at 4105,
and Kevin Purcifull also had
a PR at 40-05. Nico Aguirre also
PR-ed at 38-09.50.
In the 55 meters, Allen Hou
broke 7.0 (6.99), a strong early
season time. He just missed the
fi nals by.02 (6.97 was the cutoff ).
In the 55-meter hurdles, Isaiah
DeCrosta was out injured, and
Fajr Riazi made the fi nals with a
PR (9.88). Richard Vilme was sixth
in the high jump with a strong
early season jump of 5-8.
Three sophomores and one junior
won their heat and placed
sixth overall in 1:38.86 in the
4x200 relay, less than a half-second
behind last indoor seasonâ€™s
best time (1:38.47). They were
Yousef Benhamou, Oliver Escobar,
Geo Woodard and Jeremy X.
î€·î‹îˆ îŒî‘î–î—î„îîî„î—îŒî’î‘ î’î‰ îˆîîˆî†î—î•îŒî† î™îˆî‹îŒî†îîˆ î–î˜î“î“îîŒîˆî– îˆî”î˜îŒî“îîˆî‘î—
upon the cityâ€™s public ways; to provide a policy in which
the City can install electric vehicle charging stations;
î„î‘î‡ î„î–î–îˆî–î– î‰îˆîˆî– î‰î’î• îˆîîˆî†î—î•îŒî† î™îˆî‹îŒî†îîˆ î†î‹î„î•îŠîŒî‘îŠ î–î—î„î—îŒî’î‘î–î€‘
î€•î€‘ î€¤îîˆî‘î‡ î€¶î†î‹îˆî‡î˜îîˆ î€¬î€¹ î’î‰ î€·îŒî—îîˆ î€”î€“ î‚± î€¬î–î’îî„î—îˆî‡ î€¶î—î’î“ î€¶îŒîŠî‘î–
î…îœ î„î‡î‡îŒî‘îŠ î„ î–î—î’î“ î–îŒîŠî‘ î’î‘ î€¨îîîˆî— î€·îˆî•î•î„î†îˆ î„î— î—î‹îˆ
îŒî‘î—îˆî•î–îˆî†î—îŒî’î‘ î’î‰ î€¶î†î‹î’î’î î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—î€‘
î€–î€‘ î€¤îîˆî‘î‡ î€¶î†î‹îˆî‡î˜îîˆ î€»î€¬ î’î‰ î€·îŒî—îîˆ î€”î€“ î€«î„î‘î‡îŒî†î„î“î“îˆî‡ î€³îˆî•î–î’î‘
î€³î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠ î…îœ î„î‡î‡îŒî‘îŠ î—îšî’ î‹î„î‘î‡îŒî†î„î“î“îˆî‡ î–îŒîŠî‘î– î„î— î—î‹îˆ
following locations:
î€•î€œ î€·î•îˆî™î„îîîˆîœ î€µî’î„î‡
î€˜î€—î€“ î€µîˆî™îˆî•îˆ î€¶î—î•îˆîˆî—
76 Orvis Road
î€—î€‘ î€·î’ î„îîˆî‘î‡ î€¶î†î‹îˆî‡î˜îîˆ î€¹î€¬î€¬î€¬ î’î‰ î€·îŒî—îîˆ î€”î€“ î…îœ î„î‡î‡îŒî‘îŠ î€½î’îîî„
î€¦îŒî•î†îîˆ îŒî‘ î…îˆî†î’îîŒî‘îŠ î€µîˆî–îŒî‡îˆî‘î—îŒî„î î€³î„î•îŽîŒî‘îŠ î‰î’î• î€•î€— î‹î’î˜î•î–
î„ î‡î„îœî€ î€š î‡î„îœî– î„ îšîˆîˆîŽî€‘
î€¤î—î—îˆî–î—î€ î€³î„î˜î î€¹î€‘ î€¤î•îŠîˆî‘îîŒî’
î‚± î€¦î‹î„îŒî•îî„î‘ î’î‰ î—î‹îˆ î€·î•î„ï‚ˆî† î€¦î’îîîŒî–î–îŒî’î‘
December 15, 2023
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2023
Coach Dave Learyâ€™s game plan:
fostering talent and teamwork
at Revere
By Dom Nicastro
E
mbarking on his eighth season
with Revere High School
and a 25-year coaching career,
Dave Leary opens up about his
coaching journey and the aspirations
for the upcoming season
in an interview with the Revere
Advocate.
Learyâ€™s team dropped its
opener, 59-41, against Lynn
Classical. â€œWe fell behind big
early but never quit,â€ Leary said.
Junior Guard Ethan Day had 24
points for the Patriots in the loss.
With a strong turnout of 58
athletes at tryouts, resulting in
a robust program of 39 players
across varsity, junior varsity and
freshman teams, Leary looks
forward to harnessing the mix
of experience and fresh talent.
Leary started as a freshman
coach at St. Domenic Savio High
School, where he was a threeyear
varsity player, from 19992005.
He then went on to become
an assistant coach and the
JV coach at Malden High School
from 2005-2014. In 2014, he
was hired as head varsity coach
at Lynn Voc/Tech High School,
where he remained for two seasons
before he was hired in Revere
in 2016.
â€œThe past seven years has
been a great experience for me,
the staff and most importantly
the athletes,â€ Leary said. â€œWe really
try to create a family atmosphere,
and there is no better
feeling than to see our alumni
come back to visit the team, and
we can see the success they are
having in college or the workforce.
That is probably the main
reason our staff keeps coming
back every year.â€
Revere this season will have
11 on varsity, 14 on junior varsity
and 14 on the freshman team.
The team last year finished
11-11. It qualifi ed for the MIAA
Division 2 State Tournament
and won its fi rst-round game at
Plymouth South High School.
The Patriots were eliminated in
the next round to Nashoba Regional
High School.
This winter, the strengths of
this yearâ€™s team are hard to defi
ne this early on in the season,
according to Leary. â€œBut,â€ he added,
â€œwe have a good mix of experienced
upperclassmen and talented
underclassmen. They are
all very focused and hardworking
and are always willing to be
SAFETY | FROM Page 1
ly cleaned, along with adjoining
classrooms, in accordance with
protocols from the Mass. DepartRHS
Patriots Co-Captain Luke Ellis (at left), Head Coach David Leary
and Co-Captain Andrew Leone
coached hard.â€
The areas it needs to improve
on mostly? Building better
chemistry and an understanding
on the off ensive side of the
floor. â€œEach player will have a
role and once they learn their
roles individually, we will improve
as a team,â€ Leary said.
The captains this year are both
seniors and four-year players in
the program: Andrew Leone
and Luke Ellis. â€œAndrew Leone is
an excellent student that leads
by example both on and off the
court,â€ Leary said. â€œHe listens to
all of his teammates and communicates
well with them. Andrew
is a versatile player that
can score from inside and outside
and defi nitely plays bigger
than he is on the fl oor. Luke Ellis
has a great personality and
sense of humor. His teammates
defi nitely appreciate his ability
to keep them loose and relaxed,
but they also follow him when
itâ€™s time to be serious and get to
work. Andrew and Luke were a
big part of the reason we had a
successful season last year, and
we hope their experience can
help guide us this year, especially
early on, to lead our less-experienced
underclassmen.â€
Junior guards Ethan Day and
Josh Mercado were also key
contributors on last yearâ€™s team
and should be expected to increase
their roles this year on
both ends of the fl oor. Juniors
Avi Lung, Erick Mayorga and
Sami Mghizou will also be asked
to take on increased roles.
Senior big men Amir Yemani
and Ryan El Babor should give
Revere toughness, shot-blockment
of Public Health's Community
Sanitation Program, reports
indicated.
According to reports, the
Board of Health told the school
ing and rebounding off the
bench, while senior guard Domenic
Belmonte is a very good
3-point shooter. Sophomore
swing man Sean Burnett is long
and athletic and can also shoot
from behind the arc.
Revere junior varsity coach
John Leone is pretty much the
teamâ€™s offensive coordinator
and is â€œalways coming up with
new ways to help us create offense
when we struggle,â€ Leary
said. â€œCoach Leone was a great
player at RHS (Class of 1990), is
a fi erce competitor and is very
hard on his players to get the
best out of them, so they are
ready to play at the varsity level
when the time comes.â€
Freshman coach Bob Sullivan
is very knowledgeable, according
to Leary. He has been coaching
at the high school level for
over 30 years, was a 1,000-point
scorer at Dom Savio and won
a state championship there in
1982. â€œCoach Sullivan sees the
game very well,â€ Leary said, â€œand
we rely on him to help us make
in-game adjustments.â€
As for team goals, they are the
same every year. â€œWe would like
to win the GBL, we would like to
win our holiday tournament, we
would like to qualify for the state
tournament, and we would like
to advance further than last season,â€
Leary said. â€œThe GBL Conference
will be tough this year
as it always is. Lynn English and
Everett are traditionally always
top in the league, but Lynn Classical,
Malden, Medford, Somerville
and Chelsea will all be much
improved, as they were young
teams last season.â€
district that bed bugs are a nuisance
insect, but their bites do
not spread disease. Board of
Health offi cials also noted when
bed bugs do move from one
1. On Dec. 15, 1791, Congress
ratified the first 10
amendments to the U.S.
Constitution; what is the
document known as?
2. Reportedly, in 1997, in
the competition to be the
Massachusetts state cookie,
the Toll House chocolate
chip cookie beat what
cookie?
3. What country was the
first to legalize cryptocurrency?
4.
On Dec. 16, 1773, the
Boston Tea Party took place;
when were words â€œBoston
Tea Partyâ€ fi rst printed: 1774,
1825 or 1899?
5. In what decade was the
â€œmodâ€ British culture?
6. December 17 is National
Maple Syrup Day; what term
means an area mostly of sugar
maples?
7. What author of â€œLittle
House on the Prairieâ€ said
that â€œwe are better throughout
the year for having, in
spirit, become a child again
at Christmastimeâ€?
8. Reportedly, the Inuit
people use â€œsong duelsâ€ to
settle disputes; in what three
countries do they live?
9. What was the last name
of the American comic â€œZeppoâ€?
10.
On Dec. 18, 1966, what
â€œChristmasâ€ TV special aired
that was adapted from a Dr.
Seuss childrenâ€™s book?
Answers
11. Poinsettias are native to
what country?
12. In what 1960s TV series
would you fi nd the Russian
spy Illya Kuryakin?
13. On Dec. 19, 1915, what
French singer/actress was
born whose signature song
was â€œLa Vie en Roseâ€ (Life in
Pink)?
14. In what movie would
you fi nd the four main food
groups of candy, candy
canes, candy corn and syrup?
15.
Salem, Mass., native
Nathaniel Hawthorne died
while on a trip to the White
Mountains with what president
from New Hampshire?
16. In the 1880s what
American dime-store magnate
became rich, including
by importing glass ornaments
from Germany?
17. On Dec. 20, 1790, the
fi rst American cotton mill began
operation on the Blackstone
River in what state?
18. How are hurdle, rib and
seed similar?
19. What popular carol
was originally a German folk
song unrelated to Christmas?
20.
On Dec. 21, 1946, Louis
Jordanâ€™s R&B single â€œAinâ€™t Nobody
Here But Us Chickensâ€
debuted on the charts; he is
called the King of what early
automated music player?
person to another, they mostly
do so via bags or backpacks in a
school setting. Person-to-person
transfers are not common. Revere
Public Schools, in its letter,
asked families to closely monitor
any bags or backpacks that students
are bringing to school over
the next several weeks to ensure
there are no signs of bed bugs.
1. The Bill of Rights
2. Fig Newton
3. El Salvador (Bitcoin)
4.
1825 (Reportedly,
at the time â€œPartyâ€
referred to a group of
men, not an event.)
5. 1960s
6. Sugar bush
7. Laura Ingalls Wilder
8.
Alaska, USA, Canada
and Greenland
9. Marx
10. â€œHow the Grinch
Stole Christmas!â€
11. Mexico
12. â€œThe Man From
U.N.C.L.E.â€
13. Edith Piaf
14. â€œElfâ€
15. Franklin Pierce
16. F. W. Woolworth
17. Rhode Island
18. They are knitting
stitches.
19. â€œO Tannenbaumâ€
(celebrating the evergreen
fi r tree)
20. The jukebox
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Page 15
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2023
By Bob Katzen
If you have any questions about this weekâ€™s report, e-mail us
at bob@beaconhillrollcall.com or call us at (617) 720-1562
GET A FREE SUBSCRIPTION TO
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THE HOUSE AND SENATE: There
were no roll call votes in the
House or Senate last week. This
week, Beacon Hill Roll Call reports
local senatorsâ€™ roll call attendance
records for the 2023 session
through December 8.
The Senate has held 99 roll calls
so far in the 2023 session. Beacon
Hill Roll Call tabulates the number
of roll calls on which each senator
voted and then calculates that
number as a percentage of the
total roll call votes held. That percentage
is the number referred to
as the roll call attendance record.
Thirty-one (77.5 percent) of the
current 40 senators did not miss
any roll calls and have 100 percent
roll call attendance records.
It is a Senate tradition that the
Senate president only votes occasionally.
Current Senate President
Karen Spilka follows that
tradition and only voted on 19
(19.1 percent) of the 99 roll calls
while not voting on 80 (80.9 percent)
of them.
Eight (20 percent) of the 40 senators,
other than Spilka, missed
one or more roll calls. Sen. Liz Miranda
(D-Boston) has the worst
record. She missed nine roll calls
for a roll call attendance record of
90.9 percent.
Sen. Mike Barrett (D-Lexington)
missed two roll calls for a roll call
attendance record of 97.9 percent.
Newly elected Sen. Peter
Durant (R-Spencer), a former state
representative, also missed two
roll calls, His attendance record
is 97.1 percent -- based on the 70
roll calls the House has held. The
Senate has not held any roll calls
since Durant was sworn in.
The following senators each
missed one roll call resulting
in a 98.9 percent roll call attendance
record: Sens. Adam Gomez
(D-Springfi eld), John Keenan
(D-Quincy); Patrick Oâ€™Connor
(R-Weymouth); Mike Rush (DWest
Roxbury); and John Velis (DWestfi
eld).
Beacon Hill Roll Call contacted
the eight senators at least three
times asking why they missed
some roll calls. Only three of the
eight responded.
---Sen. Mirandaâ€™s chief of staff
Kevin Higgins responded: â€œThe
roll calls [missed by] Sen. Miranda
were all in a formal session on
February 9th, pertaining to Senate
rules, where remote participation
had not yet been adopted.
Sen. Miranda was not able
to participate as she was home
sick with COVID-19. We are grateful
that the Senate adopted remote
participation rules this session,
following guidance that is
aligned with public health recommendations.â€
---Sen.
Oâ€™Connorâ€™s legislative director
Thomas Skehill responded:
â€œSen. Oâ€™Connor missed â€¦ roll
call #37 â€¦ due to a medical appointment.â€
---
Sen. Gomez responded: â€œI
am going through recovery from
kidney transplant surgery. On
May 4, 2023, I received my transplant.
While during this 6-month
period there couldâ€™ve been a moment
that I was predisposed within
my recovery process. Couldâ€™ve
been slow trying to getting my
vote in on time as well. Mobility
was tough during the fi rst couple
months. Especially if it was a
late vote during our marathon in
closing out from summer session.â€
---Sens. Keenan, Rush, Velis, Durant
and Barrett did not respond
to repeated requests by Beacon
Hill Roll Call asking them for a
statement.
SENATORSâ€™ 2023 ROLL CALL ATTENDANCE
RECORDS THROUGH
DECEMBER 8, 2023
The percentage listed next to
the senatorâ€™s name is the percentage
of roll call votes on which the
senator voted. The number in parentheses
represents the number
of roll calls that he or she missed.
Sen. Lydia Edwards
100 percent (0)
ALSO UP ON BEACON HILL
DONâ€™T MISS THIS EVENT ON
THE FUTURE OF OFFSHORE WIND
- Off shore wind in Massachusetts
is about to achieve a signifi cant
milestone while facing an uncertain
future. With the cornerstone
of Massachusettsâ€™ clean energy
goals at stake, can the state
surmount challenging economic
conditions to expand wind
power?
Join MASSterList and the State
House News Service for an inperson
event at the Massachusetts
Continuing Legal Education
(MCLE) in Downtown Crossing,
Boston on Dec 14 from 7:30
a.m. to 10 a.m. Speakers include
leading offshore wind executives
and environmental leaders,
with opening remarks from Energy
and Environmental Aff airs
Secretary Rebecca Tepper. More
info and tickets: https://massterlist.com/headwinds-for-off
shorewind/
$3.1
BILLION SUPPLEMENTAL
BUDGET (H 4204) - The House
and Senate approved and Gov.
Maura Healey signed into law a
$3.1 billion supplemental budget
to close out fi scal year 2023.
A key and controversial provision
provides for $250 million for sheltering
eligible families during the
emergency shelter crisis created
by the recent infl ux of thousands
of migrants.
Other provisions include $2.1
billion for MassHealth to cover
end of year defi ciencies; $75 million
for school districts impacted
by special education tuition rate
increases; $15 million for disaster
relief for municipalities impacted
by storms and naturals disasters
that occurred in 2023; $378 million
to fund collective bargaining
agreements; and $500,000 for the
Commission on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual,
Transgender, Queer and
Questioning Youth.
The House and Senate approved
the package in informal
sessions during which, under
House and Senate rules, roll call
votes are not allowed. The Senate
agreed to a GOP proposal to hold
a formal session but the House
did not agree and a formal session
was not held.
The budget was approved
on a 105-14 standing vote in
the House and by a 20-3 standing
vote in the Senate. During
a standing vote, members who
support a bill are asked to stand
up and be counted. Following
that, members who oppose the
bill are asked to stand up and be
counted. Senators do not cast an
individual vote so there is no recorded
roll call vote on the bill.
â€œIâ€™m proud to sign this supplemental
budget that dedicates
critical funding for hard-earned
raises for workers, supports municipalities
with covering the
costs of special education and
fl ood relief, sustains our Emergency
Assistance program and more,â€
said Gov. Healey.
â€œThe Senate understands how
much of an impact our work has
on the residents of the commonwealthâ€”especially
when pay
raises for hard-working employees
and funding for emergency
shelter is on the line,â€ said Senate
President Karen Spilka (DAshland).
â€œThe
House Republican Caucus
understands the importance
of passing a fi nal defi ciency appropriations
bill to address the
unfunded union contract situation,
provide disaster relief funding
for cities and town and meet
the fi duciary responsibilities associated
with closing the books on
fi scal year 2023,â€ said GOP House
Minority Leader Rep. Brad Jones
(R-North Reading). â€œAt the same
time, we remain deeply concerned
about the lack of meaningful
reforms contained in the
bill to address the emergency
shelter crisis created by the recent
infl ux of thousands of migrants,
which remains an untenable situation
that must be resolved.â€
â€œDemocratic leadership put us
in an impossible situation by intentionally
weaving these separate
issues together,â€ continued
Jones. â€œThere is no legitimate reason
that funding for union contracts
and aid for cities and towns
needed to be tied to controversial
immigration policy. It was done
by design.â€
â€œThe Senate again acted swiftly
and decisively to close the
books and pass the closeout
supplemental budget for fi scal
year 2023,â€ said Senate Ways and
Means chair Sen. Mike Rodrigues
(D-Westport). â€œWith $250 million
in emergency funding, we met
the challenge of an unprecedented
humanitarian crisis headon.
We also allocated $378 million
to fully fund over 90 collective
bargaining agreements for
state workers, absolved a $100
million pension liability from the
2015 Early Retirement Incentive
Program and dedicated substantial
funding to special education
and disaster relief for municipalities
across the commomwealth.â€
â€œMassachusetts taxpayers deserved
a [rollcall] vote and transparency
on this controversial
spending bill,â€ said Paul Craney, a
spokesman for the Massachusetts
Fiscal Alliance. â€œStatehouse leadership
routinely use procedural
loopholes to pass controversial
items outside of good legislative
practices. â€œItâ€™s refreshing to see
some lawmakers try to change
that. Letâ€™s hope this sets a precedent
for good government practices
over backroom deals.â€
FINES FOR NOISE VIOLATIONS
(H 2026) â€“ The Municipalities
and Regional Government Committee
held a hearing on legislation
that would allow cities and
towns to make a property owner
responsible for the cost of excessive
noise complaint calls made
to the police about noise at the
ownerâ€™s address. Under the bill,
the property owner would be required
to reimburse the city or
town for each police call that exceeds
more than ten in a calendar
year.
â€œWhen our police departments
respond to a disturbance, it represents
a cost to the municipality
and the taxpayers,â€ said sponsor
Rep. Bruce Ayers (D-Quincy).
â€œThis bill creates a method
by which cities and towns can
recoup that cost when it comes
to frequent off enders of issues
such as disturbing the peace, excessive
noise or suspicious activity.
After ten police calls regarding
complaints for a specifi c address
or location within one calendar
year, this bill permits local
municipalities to impart the costs
associated with these calls and
subsequent actions taken on the
property owner. This creates a further
incentive to curb the behavior
while also easing the burden
on the police department, municipality
and the taxpayers.â€
EQUIP ALL FIRST RESPONDER
AND PUBLIC SAFETY VEHICLES
WITH AUTOMATED EXTERNAL
DEFIBRILLATORS (S 1517) â€“
The Public Safety and Homeland
Security Committee held a hearing
on a bill that would create the
Automatic External Defi brillator
Trust Fund which would provide
grants to municipalities, public
colleges and universities to purchase
Automated external defi -
brillators (AEDs). The fund would
be fi nanced by a new 50-cent tax
on the rental of cars and other vehicles
in the Bay State.
â€œPassage of this legislation is
critical to enhancing public safety.
AEDs are life-saving devices
which can be incredibly instrumental
for individuals who undergo
sudden cardiac arrest,â€
said sponsor Sen. Ryan Fattman
(R-Sutton). â€œSetting aside dedicated
funding to ensure all the
commonwealthâ€™s public safety
vehicles are equipped with this
device is paramount, especially
in communities and locations
where AEDs are not readily available
and accessible.â€
REQUIRE SEAT BELTS ON
SCHOOL BUSSES (S 1504) â€“ Another
proposal heard by the Public
Safety and Homeland Security
Committee would require
that, eff ective July 1, 2026, every
school bus transporting students
to or from a public, vocational,
private or parochial school be
equipped with a seatbelt for each
permanent seating accommodation.
The bill permits a municipality
to enact an earlier implementation
date. It also prohibits lawsuits
against cities and towns based on
the failure of a school bus operator,
school or municipality to ensure
a passenger was wearing the
restraint.
â€œEnsuring the safety and wellbeing
of children throughout the
commonwealth is one of my top
priorities,â€ said sponsor Sen. Sal
DiDomenico (D-Everett). â€œThis
commonsense proposal will protect
countless kids on their way to
and from school each day without
placing any signifi cant fi nancial
burdens on our school districts.â€
BAN
DISCRIMINATION BASED
ON HEIGHT AND WEIGHT (H
1705) â€“ A bill that would prohibit
discrimination on the basis of
a personâ€™s height or weight, unless
for the purpose of compliance
with any established state,
federal or industry safety stanBEACON
| SEE Page 18
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Sdcmvaauhk3ANXQV5IcHYddDFewrRug8_xShCo6-rJUÍ$ªÍ`Ì°Í ×e{‚hË÷@î÷ôh×‰EÚ#]THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2023
Page 17
Raffaele G. Rizzo
OBITUARIES
Family & friends were invited
to attend visiting hours on
Tuesday, December 12th in the
Vertuccio Smith & Vazza, Beechwood
Home for Funerals, Revere.
A Funeral Mass was celebrated
in St. Anthony of Padua
Church, Revere followed by entombment
in Woodlawn Cemetery
- Versailles Mausoleum,
Everett.
Please OMIT flowers, donations
may be made to the Alzheimerâ€™s
Association, 225 N.
Michigan Ave. 17 Fl., Chicago,
IL 60601.
Anthony Capano
O
f Revere. Died on Saturday,
December 9th at the Kaplan
Family Hospice in Danvers following
a brief battle with prostate
cancer. He was 94 years old.
Raff aele was born in his native
land of Chiusano, San Domenico,
Italy. It was there he was born
& raised along with his eight
brothers and sisters. He was educated
there and he also, like
many of his generation, had a
tremendous work ethic. Raff aele,
worked as a train engineer
for the railroad in Switzerland,
being away for many months at
a time. During this time, he married
his wife, Maria G. (DiPierro)
and had a daughter & son while
in Italy. Raff aele, had decided to
make a change and moved to
the United States in 1966, landing
in Bostonâ€™s North End, then
moving to Revere in 1977. Raffaele
worked as a butcher at
Rodmanâ€™s in Boston for over 10
years before retiring. He enjoyed
being surrounded by his family,
especially his grandchildren
and great grandchildren, nothing
mattered more to him than
family. He was also a very good
handy man repairing or replacing
anything that needed to be
fi xed. His passion was his garden.
He loved growing vegetables,
fruits and plants. His family
always got to enjoy his harvest
each year.
He is the beloved husband of
the late Maria G. (DiPierro) Rizzo
of 59 years. Loving father of Antonietta
Picardi & her husband
Robert & Ermelindo â€œLennyâ€ Rizzo
& his wife Maria, all of Revere.
Cherished nonno of Amy Salvati
& husband Joseph of Salisbury,
Robert A. Picardi, Anthony Rizzo,
Johnny Rizzo & Linda (Rizzo)
Fillion & husband David all
of Revere and the late Raff aele
â€œRalphâ€ Rizzo & his wife Melissa
Rizzo of Revere. Adored great
nonno of Julian, Mia, Melinda,
Jeannett, Julia, Ava, Dylan, Ryder,
Dear brother of Ermelindo
Rizzo of Italy & 7 late brothers
& sisters.
took great pride in his plantings.
Anthony cherished his three
grandchildren and was loyal and
dedicated to visiting them every
Sunday for the last 17 years.
Family and friends gathered
to honor and remember Anthony
on Saturday December 9
at Buonfi glio Funeral Home, Revere.
A funeral mass followed at
St. Anthonyâ€™s Church and burial
at Holy Cross Cemetery, Malden,
Ma.
Giuseppa (Viola)
Cunsolo
How to
Ease the Winter Blues
Dear Savvy Senior,
What can you tell me about seasonal aff ective
disorder? Iâ€™ve always disliked winter, but since I retired
and am home a lot more, the gray, cold winter
months make me feel really blue.
Sad Sam
Dear Sam,
If you get depressed in the
winter but feel better in spring
and summer, you may indeed
have seasonal aff ective disorder,
or SAD, a wintertime depression
that aff ects roughly 5
percent of Americans.
In most cases, SAD is relatO
O
f
Reve re.
Died peacefully
on December
4, 2023 at his home. He is
survived by his
daughter Donna (Capano)
Wells and her husband Richard
Wells of Chester, N.H., his son
Anthony Capano jr. and his wife
Sandra of Concord, MA., and his
son Michael Capano and his wife
Jaime of Derry, N.H. along with
many nieces and nephews and
friends. He was a loving grandfather
â€œPapaâ€ to Ariana M. Capano,
Jordan A. Capano, and Brody
M. Capano. Anthony was pre
deceased by his late wife Angelina
(Spinale) Capano and his
parents Luigi and Rosaria Capano.
As well as a loving brother
of the late Connie Pantano, Eugenia
Russo and Albert Capano.
Anthony was born on June
19, 1935. He was a lifelong resident
of Revere. After attending
Revere schools, Anthony enlisted
in the Navy. He traveled
the world aboard aircraft carriers.
He still would talk about
his Navy days with great wonder
and appreciation. Anthony
then came home to reside in
Revere for the rest of his life. He
was a proud member of Teamsters,
Local 25. He lived close to
Revere Beach and loved long
walks on the shore. Anthony
also loved woodworking. He enjoyed
building models with intricate
detail. Many of which he
made for his children. He also
loved his flower gardens and
f Revere, died unexpectedly
at her home on Saturday,
December 9th, she recently celebrated
her 82nd birthday on
December 4th. Giuseppa was
born on December 4, 1941. Together
with her husband, they
moved from Pietraperzia to East
Boston in 1973 and fi nally to Revere
in 1995. She lived her life
devoted to her family, who were
always her top priority.
Giuseppa is the beloved wife
of the late Rocco Cunsolo. The
loving mother of Vincenzo Cunsolo
(Son) & wife Viviana (daughter
in law) of Peabody, Michele
Cunsolo (Son) & Giuseppe Cunsolo
(Son) both of Casale, Italy, &
Filippo Cunsolo (Son) of Revere.
Cherished grandmother of Rocco
Cunsolo of Revere, Vincenzo
Cunsolo & wife Maria of Somerville,
and the late Rocco Cunsolo.
Dear sister of Maria Viola, Sara Viola,
and Calogero â€œLilloâ€ Viola, all
of Italy and the late Salvatore Viola,
late Concetta Viola, late Vincenza
Salvaggio, & late Fillipo
Viola. Also lovingly survived by
many nieces, nephews, grandnieces,
& grandnephews, in the
United States & Italy.
Family & friends were invited
to attend visiting hours on
Wednesday, December 13th
in the Vertuccio Smith & Vazza
Beechwood Home for Funerals,
Revere. A funeral was conducted
from the funeral home on
Thursday, December 14th, followed
by a funeral mass in St.
Anthony of Padua Church, Revere.
Interment followed in Holy
Cross Cemetery, Malden.
Like us on Facebook advocate newspaper
Facebook.com/Advocate.news.ma
ed to the loss of sunlight in the
winter months. Reduced sunlight
can upset natural sleepwake
cycles and other circadian
rhythms that can aff ect the
body. It can also cause a drop
in the brain chemical serotonin,
which aff ects mood, and can
increase the levels of the hormone
melatonin, which can
make you feel more tired and
lethargic.
If you think you may have
SAD, a trip to your doctorâ€™s offi
ce is the best way to diagnose
it or you can take a SAD â€œselfassessmentâ€
test at the Center
for Environmental Therapeutics
website at CET.org/assessments.
If you fi nd that you have
SAD, here are several treatment
options and remedies that can
help.
Light therapy: The most effective
treatment for SAD is
sitting in front of a specialized
light therapy box for 20 to 30
minutes a day, within the fi rst
hour of waking up in the morning.
Light therapy mimics outdoor
light to cause a change
in brain chemicals linked to
mood.
While you can buy a light box
without a prescription, itâ€™s best
to use it under the guidance of
a health care provider and follow
the manufacturerâ€™s guidelines.
Most health insurance
plans do not cover the cost.
The best light therapy lamps
provide 10,000 lux of illumination,
many times stronger than
typical indoor light, and have a
diff user screen that fi lters out
ultraviolet rays and projects
downward toward the eyes.
Some top-rated light therapy
products include the Carex
Day-Light Classic Plus Bright
Lamp ($145); Northern Light
Technology Boxelite-OS ($205);
and the budget friendly Verilux
HappyLight Luxe ($70), all
of which are available at Amazon.com.
Cognitive
behavioral therapy:
Even though SAD is considered
to be a biological problem,
identifying and changing
thought and behavior patterns
can help alleviate symptoms
too. To help you with this,
choose a therapist who specializes
in cognitive behavioral
therapy and who has experience
in treating SAD. To locate
someone in your area, Psychology
Today off ers a search
tool at PsychologyToday.com/
us/therapists/cognitive-behavioral-cbt.
Antidepressants:
Some
people with SAD benefi t from
antidepressant treatments too.
Some proven medications to
ask your doctor about are selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors
(SSRIs) and the extended-release
antidepressant bupropion.
But
keep in mind that it may
take several weeks to notice
full benefits from an antidepressant.
In addition, you may
have to try diff erent medications
before you fi nd one that
works well for you and has the
fewest side eff ects.
Lifestyle remedies: Some
other things you can do to help
alleviate your SAD symptoms
include making your environment
sunnier and brighter. So,
open up your blinds, sit closer
to bright windows and get outside
as much as you can. Even
on cold or cloudy days, outdoor
light can help, especially
if you spend some time outside
within two hours of getting up
in the morning.
Moderate exercise such as
walking, swimming, yoga and
even tai chi can also help alleviate
SAD symptoms, as can social
activities.
Send your senior questions to: Savvy Senior, P.O. Box
5443, Norman, OK 73070, or visit SavvySenior.org. Jim
Miller is a contributor to the NBC Today show and author
of â€œThe Savvy Seniorâ€ book.
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2023
Copyrighted material previously published in Banker & Tradesman/The Commercial Record, a weekly trade newspaper. It is reprinted with permission
from the publisher, The Warren Group. For a searchable database of real estate transactions and property information visit: www.thewarrengroup.com
BUYER1
Gallego, Juan P
Garza, Carlos
Guerra, Edin M
Neto, Flavio N
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
SELLER1
BUYER2
Guerra, Dairin
GIFTS | FROM Page 1
Dillon, Shawntelle
Rochelle H Zapol Ft
Goss, Kenneth G
Larosa, Charles
SELLER2
ADDRESS
350 Revere Beach Blvd #9T
Zapol, Rochelle H 11 Franklin Ave
Goss, Robin G 19 Thorndike St
Larosa, Jean T 585 Revere Beach Pkwy #403
DATE PRICE
11.30.23 350000
11.28.23 670000
11.28.23 905000
11.30.23 245000
Revere
DJ, Dennis, Jackson and Mason Calzava, Roman, and Jayden Guarino, were among
those receiving gifts at Revere Housing Authority.
BEACON | FROM Page 16
dard, was heard by the Judiciary
Committee.
â€œThis bill takes an important
step towards rectifying biases
about a personâ€™s height and
weight factors often beyond
their control,â€ said sponsor Rep.
Tram Nguyen (D-Andover). â€œBody
size discrimination aff ects all aspects
of an individualâ€™s life, from
the workplace, to healthcare, to
their education. By safeguarding
individuals from discrimination
based on their looks we not only
promote equal opportunities but
also foster a healthier and more
equitable community.â€.
INVESTIGATE WHY WOMEN PAY
MORE FOR THE SAME PRODUCTS
BOUGHT BY MEN (H 1639) â€“ Another
bill heard by the Judiciary
Committee would establish a
working group on gender equity
to investigate the price diff erentiations
between products marketed
to males versus those marketed
to females.
Supporters said this so-called
â€œpink taxâ€ refers to a markup on
goods and services marketed to
women in which men pay less
for similar or even identical products
and services. They said price
discrimination, especially when
based on gender, is unjust and
should not be tolerated. Everyday
transactions, including purchases
for jeans, haircuts, childrenâ€™s toys
and hundreds of other products,
are marked up for women.
â€œThe price of similar goods
and services off ered to men and
women suff ers from an embedded
disparity along gendered
lines,â€ said sponsor Rep. Jay Livingston
(D-Boston). â€œI have proposed
this legislation to start a
commission that will examine potential
solutions that will address
this pricing discrimination issue.â€
APPLY CAMPAIGN FINANCE
LAWS TO TOWN MEETING ARTICLES
(H 4173) â€“ A bill before the
Election Laws Committee would
apply the stateâ€™s campaign finance
election laws to political
entities or expenditures made
to infl uence the outcome of articles
that appear on Town Meeting
warrants.
â€œLocal policy decisions should
be made by town residents, but
a loophole in campaign fi nance
law allows for unfettered spending
by outside groups to sway
town decisions,â€ said co-sponsor
Rep. Dylan Fernandes (D-Falmouth).
â€œOur bill closes the loophole
and stems the fl ow of dark
money that too often drowns out
the voice of locals. Itâ€™s time to give
power back to the people.â€
â€œPolitical spending on issues
before Town Meetings should
be required to follow the same
rules of the road as candidates,
ballot questions and other political
campaigns,â€ said co-sponsor
Sen. Julian Cyr (D-Truro). â€œItâ€™s
bewildering and distressing that
people with deep pockets and
fi nancial interests think they can
buy their way into our local governance.
Weâ€™re done with monied
interests trying to sway town politics
on the Cape and Islands. Voters
deserve to know who is behind
campaigns seeking to infl uence
local policies that will impact
those of us who live here yearround.
Our robust laws on political
spending have served the
commonwealthâ€™s representative
democracy well for a half century
â€” those should apply to lobbying
at Town Meeting.â€
Shown from left to right: Police Sgt. Joseph Internicola, Santa, Immaculate Conception
Parish Reverend Wellington Oliveira, Mayor Patrick Keefe and Carpenters
Union Business Representative Hector Rivera. (Advocate photos by Tara Vocino)
QUOTABLE QUOTES
â€œWell, Iâ€™m proud of the things
that we were able to get done
this year. You know, as I look back,
and itâ€™s a time of refl ection to a
certain extent, as I look back on
the year, I mean, the budget that
we passed that I signed, [had]
really, really important investments,
education, workforce, climate
initiatives, housing. Tax cuts
for the fi rst time in over 20 years.â€
---Gov. Maura Healey refl ecting
on her fi rst year in offi ce.
â€œThe Digital Equity Partnerships
Program supports organizations
across Massachusetts
that help residents build their
digital skills and get online so
they can participate fully in our
state economy, access modern
health services, get connected
to loved ones and so much more.
We are excited to announce todayâ€™s
grants through the Massachusetts
Broadband Institute,
which will help make technology
more accessible for everyone
across the state.â€
--- Massachusetts Secretary of
Economic Development Yvonne
Hao announcing $20 million in
new grants through the stateâ€™s
Digital Equity Partnerships Program,
which supports high-impact
and scalable initiatives that
reach residents most aff ected by
the digital divide.
â€œThese benefi ts help all Massachusetts
residents, whether they
are taking leave for themselves, a
loved one or to welcome a new
member of their family. Eliminating
language barriers for these
benefi ts can be lifesaving for people,
and I applaud the Paid Family
and Medical Leave team for their
commitment to accessibility.â€
---Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll on the
Healey administration launching
accessibility and equitability
enhancements to the Massachusetts
Paid Family and Medical
Leave including allowing applicants
for benefi ts to now select
Spanish, Portuguese, Haitian,
Creole or Chinese, in addition
to English, when applying
for benefi ts.
â€œWhen people walk into the
governorâ€™s offi ce, I want them to
feel seen, represented and empowered.
An important way to
do this is by hanging artwork
that is representative of the diverse
Massachusetts experience.â€
--Gov. Maura Healey announcing
that she has selected two
paintings by artists of color to
hang in the governorâ€™s executive
offi ce suite.
â€œThe Massachusetts Department
of Correction recognizes
the importance of incarcerated
individuals maintaining
bonds with their loved ones. No
cost calls will alleviate the fi nancial
burden and remove barriers
for an individual in â€¦ custody
to stay connected with their
outside support system. Strong
family support helps to advance
the rehabilitative process, reduces
recidivism and contributes to
successful reentry upon release.â€
---Department of Corrections
Commissioner Carol Mici announcing
the implementation of
no cost phone calls in its 14 correctional
facilities to provide equitable
access to sustained communication
between incarcerated
individuals and their loved
ones.
HOW LONG WAS LAST WEEKâ€™S
SESSION? Beacon Hill Roll Call
tracks the length of time that the
House and Senate were in session
each week. Many legislators
say that legislative sessions
are only one aspect of the Legislatureâ€™s
job and that a lot of important
work is done outside of
the House and Senate chambers.
They note that their jobs also involve
committee work, research,
constituent work and other matters
that are important to their
districts. Critics say that the Legislature
does not meet regularly or
long enough to debate and vote
in public view on the thousands
of pieces of legislation that have
been fi led. They note that the infrequency
and brief length of sessions
are misguided and lead to
irresponsible late-night sessions
and a mad rush to act on dozens
of bills in the days immediately
preceding the end of an annual
session.
During the week of December
4-8, the House met for a total of
seven hours and 11 minutes and
the Senate met for a total of fi ve
hours and 37 minutes.
Mon. Dec. 4 House 10:01 a.m.
to 4:35 p.m.
Senate 11:06 a.m. to 4:36 p.m.
Tues. Dec. 5 No House session
No Senate session
Wed. Dec. 6 No House session
No Senate session
Thurs. Dec. 7 House 11:08 a.m.
to 11:45 a.m.
Senate 11:37 a.m. to 11:44 a.m.
Fri. Dec. 8 No House session
No Senate session
Bob Katzen
welcomes feedback at
bob@beaconhillrollcall.com
Bob founded Beacon Hill Roll
Call in 1975 and was inducted
into the New England Newspaper
and Press Association (NENPA)
Hall of Fame in 2019.
×‰	Ú 7cassandra://Q1j6T-lU9q42V9E49GLazuvS_zbnSmGV6kxUehTkEasÍ(3Í`Ì°Í ×e{‚hË÷@î÷ôj×‰EÚ5THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2023
Page 19
MIAA | FROM Page 11
percent of fi eld hockey games.
It was a vote that has been considered for
months, but the call to add a win-loss component
heated up this past fall when Everett
High football â€“ a traditionally strong playoff
qualifi er and winner of 13 Super Bowls in
the past 30 seasons â€“ failed to qualify for the
Division 1 playoff s despite a 7-1 regular season
and Greater Boston League Championship.
Everett fi nished out of the money, ranked
18th and behind two teams, #15-ranked Leominster
(4-4) and #16-ranked Braintree, both
of which fi nished regular season at 4-4, in a
16-team bracket. Six games against weaker
Greater Boston League competition ended
up saddling Everett High football as the only
team out of the 33 teams sitting in Division 1
to have a minus opposition teams rating.
Some opinions being fl oated in football circles
are suggestions that Everett High continue
to be a full member of the GBL â€“ except
for football â€“ and for the Crimson Tide to play
an independent football schedule, choosing
teams more on its own plane of competition.
Everett could continue to play GBL schools on
the football fi eld if it so chose, but as a new
independent, could also choose to go completely
out of the GBL for football scheduling,
if such a move came to pass.
This move was openly discussed before, but
never carried out, during the former reign of
Everett football supremacy in the 2000s and
2010s under legendary former Head Coach
John DiBiaso Jr., whose teams â€“ at one pointâ€“
won 11 of 15 Super Bowl titles in 15 years
from 1997-2012, then two more in 2016-2017.
Coach DiBiaso left Everett and went to coach
at Catholic Memorial after his fi nal Super Bowl
win, in 2017.
Revere man sentenced to five years
in prison for drug and firearm
possession
Defendant possessed fi rearm and nearly 30 grams of crack cocaine and fentanyl
A
Revere man was sentenced on December
6, 2023, in federal court
in Boston for possessing cocaine and
fentanyl as well as receiving a fi rearm
while under indictment for felony
charges. Cesar Rivera, 24, was sentenced
by U.S. District Court Judge
Richard G. Stearns to fi ve years in prison
followed by three years of supervised
release. In December 2022, Rivera
pleaded guilty to one count of
possession with intent to distribute
cocaine and fentanyl and one count
of receipt of a fi rearm while under indictment
for felony charges.
In December 2020, Rivera was
wanted on outstanding warrants on
multiple state gun cases for which he
had failed to respond to court summonses
or appear in court for over a
year. On Dec. 22, 2020, Rivera was located
at a carwash in Malden and subsequently
arrested. At the time of his
arrest, Rivera was carrying approximately
28 grams of crack cocaine, fentanyl
and a Glock fi rearm.
In October 2020, two months prior
to his arrest, while wanted on the outstanding
warrants, Rivera and Phillips
Charles had a brief encounter with a
rival gang member, his girlfriend and
their one-year-old child at the Square
One Mall in Saugus. After the encounter,
Rivera and Charles pursued
the victim and his family and fi red at
least seven rounds into their vehicle.
Following Riveraâ€™s arrest, ballistics examination
of the Glock fi rearm recovered
from Rivera in December 2020
revealed that it had been used in the
October 2020 shooting.
In September 2022, Charles was
sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge
Nathaniel M. Gorton to 78 months in
prison and four years of supervised
release.
Acting U.S. Attorney Joshua S. Levy;
the Special Agent in Charge of the
FBIâ€™s Boston Division, Jodi Cohen; the
Special Agent in Charge of the Bureau
of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosivesâ€™
Boston Field Division, James
M. Ferguson; Massachusetts State Police
Interim Colonel John E. Mawn, Jr.;
and Malden Police Chief Kevin Molis
made the announcement. Valuable
assistance was provided by the Massachusetts
State Police, the Middlesex
County and Suff olk County District
Attorneyâ€™s Offi ces and the Boston
Police Department. Assistant U.S.
Attorney Philip A. Mallard of the Organized
Crime & Gang Unit prosecuted
the case.
This eff ort was part of an Organized
Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces
(OCDETF) operation. OCDETF identifi
es, disrupts and dismantles the highest-level
criminal organizations that
threaten the United States using a
prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven,
multi-agency approach. Additional
information about OCDETF can
be found at https://www.justice.gov/
OCDETF.
at 781-286-8500 or Info@advocatenews.net
call he Adv cate Ne spapers
For Advertising with Results,
call The Advocate Newspapers
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THE REVERE ADVOCATE â€“ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2023
î€ƒî€›î€¬î€ªî€Ÿî€¨î€£î€®î€© î€’î€Ÿî€›î€¦ î€…î€­î€®î€›î€®î€Ÿ î€£î€­ î€¨î€©î€±
îŒî‚œî’î’ îŠîˆŸî‰Šîˆ¤îˆ¦îˆ¦î‰Šîˆ¦îˆîˆ
îˆ£ îƒ»îƒŠî„¿îƒµî…… îƒ€î„îƒºî„˜îƒµîƒŠî„¦îƒŠîƒ† î„Ÿî„¦î„î„›îƒŠîƒœî„›î„îƒ»î„¦
îƒœî‚¨îƒ€î‚¨îƒ†îƒŠî„Ÿ îƒ€î„îƒ»î„Ÿîƒ¥î„Ÿî„¦îƒ¥îƒ»îƒ î„îƒœ î„¦î„¿î„ îƒ€î„îƒ»îƒ†î„î„Ÿî‰‰
î€îŒîŒ î„îƒ€îƒ€î„«î„˜îƒ¥îƒŠîƒ† î‰ª îƒî„›îƒŠî‚¨î„¦ îƒ¥îƒ»îƒ€î„îƒºîƒŠî‰‰
î¶î€î‚‚î€µî‚‚î¶ îŠîˆ£îˆ¤îˆ¢î‰Šîˆîˆîˆ
î€£î…„î„˜î‚¨îƒ»îƒ†îƒŠîƒ† îƒ€î‚¨î„˜îƒŠ î„¿îƒ¥î„¦îƒ¢ îƒœîƒ¥î„›îƒŠî„˜îƒµî‚¨îƒ€îƒŠî‰Š
îƒ¢î‚¨î„›îƒ†î„¿î„î„îƒ†î‰Š îƒ€îƒŠîƒ»î„¦î„›î‚¨îƒµ î‚¨îƒ¥î„›î‰Š î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† î‚¨ îƒî‚¨î„›î‚¨îƒîƒŠî‰Š
îƒµî„îƒ€î‚¨î„¦îƒŠîƒ† îƒ¥îƒ» îƒ†îƒŠî„Ÿîƒ¥î„›î‚¨î‚¿îƒµîƒŠ î€½îƒ»îƒ†îƒ¥î‚¨îƒ» î‚•î‚¨îƒµîƒµîƒŠî……î‰‰
î¶î€î‚‚î€µî‚‚î¶ îŠîˆ¥îˆ¦îˆ¦î‰Šîˆ¦îˆîˆ
î¶îƒ¥î„¦î„«î‚¨î„¦îƒŠîƒ† îƒ¥îƒ» î‚¨ îƒ†îƒŠî„Ÿîƒ¥î„›î‚¨î‚¿îƒµîƒŠî‰Š
îƒŠî…„îƒ€îƒµî„«î„Ÿîƒ¥î„¾îƒŠ îƒ»îƒŠîƒ¥îƒîƒ¢î‚¿î„î„›îƒ¢î„î„îƒ†î‰Š î„¦îƒ¢îƒ¥î„Ÿ
îƒ€î„«î„Ÿî„¦î„îƒº î„îƒ»îƒŠî‰¨î„î„¿îƒ»îƒŠî„› îƒ€î„îƒµî„îƒ»îƒ¥î‚¨îƒµ
î‚¿î„î‚¨î„Ÿî„¦î„Ÿ îˆ¥ î„›î„î„îƒºî„Ÿî‰Š îˆ¡ î‚¿îƒŠîƒ†î„›î„î„îƒºî„Ÿî‰Š
î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† îˆŸî‰‰îˆ¢ î‚¿î‚¨î„¦îƒ¢î„Ÿî‰‰ î½îƒ¢îƒŠ îƒ³îƒ¥î„¦îƒ€îƒ¢îƒŠîƒ»
î„î„˜îƒŠîƒ»î„Ÿ î„¦î„ î‚¨ îƒ†îƒ¥îƒ»îƒ¥îƒ»îƒ î„›î„î„îƒº î‚¨îƒ»îƒ†
îƒµîƒ¥î„¾îƒ¥îƒ»îƒ î„›î„î„îƒºî‰Š î„îƒœîƒœîƒŠî„›îƒ¥îƒ»îƒ î‚¨ îƒî„›îƒŠî‚¨î„¦
î„î„˜îƒŠîƒ» îƒœîƒµî„î„î„› î„˜îƒµî‚¨îƒ»î‰‰ î€£îƒ»îƒ±î„î…… î‚¨
îƒœîƒ¥î„›îƒŠî„˜îƒµî‚¨îƒ€îƒŠ îƒ¥îƒ» î„¦îƒ¢îƒŠ îƒµîƒ¥î„¾îƒ¥îƒ»îƒ î„›î„î„îƒºî‰Š î‚¨ î„Ÿîƒµîƒ¥îƒ†îƒŠî„› î„¦î„ î‚¨îƒ» î„î„¾îƒŠî„›î„Ÿîƒ¥î…îƒŠîƒ† îƒ†îƒŠîƒ€îƒ³î‰Š î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† î‚¨ îƒºî‚¨îƒ¥îƒ»
î‚¿îƒŠîƒ†î„›î„î„îƒº î„¿îƒ¥î„¦îƒ¢ î‚¨ î„˜î„›îƒ¥î„¾î‚¨î„¦îƒŠ î‚¿î‚¨î„¦îƒ¢î‰‰ î½îƒ¢îƒŠ îƒœîƒ¥îƒ»îƒ¥î„Ÿîƒ¢îƒŠîƒ† îƒµî„î„¿îƒŠî„› îƒµîƒŠî„¾îƒŠîƒµ îƒœîƒŠî‚¨î„¦î„«î„›îƒŠî„Ÿ î‚¨
î„¿î‚¨îƒµîƒ³î‰¨î„î„«î„¦ î„Ÿîƒµîƒ¥îƒ†îƒŠî„› î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† î‚¨ î‚¿î„«îƒ¥îƒµî„¦î‰¨îƒ¥îƒ» î‚¿î‚¨î„›î‰‰ î€îƒ†îƒ†îƒ¥î„¦îƒ¥î„îƒ»î‚¨îƒµ î‚¨îƒºîƒŠîƒ»îƒ¥î„¦îƒ¥îƒŠî„Ÿ îƒ¥îƒ»îƒ€îƒµî„«îƒ†îƒŠ
îƒ€îƒŠîƒ»î„¦î„›î‚¨îƒµ î‚¨îƒ¥î„›î‰Š î‚¨ î„¦î„¿î„î‰¨îƒ€î‚¨î„› îƒî‚¨î„›î‚¨îƒîƒŠî‰Š î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† î‚¨ î„Ÿî„¦î……îƒµîƒ¥î„Ÿîƒ¢ îƒœî‚¨î„›îƒºîƒŠî„›î‰½î„Ÿ î„˜î„î„›îƒ€îƒ¢î‰‰
î¶î€î‚‚î€µî‚‚î¶ îŠîˆ£îˆŸîˆ¦î‰Šîˆ¦îˆîˆ
î€£î…„î„˜î‚¨îƒ»îƒ†îƒŠîƒ† î„›î‚¨îƒ»îƒ€îƒ¢ î„¿îƒ¥î„¦îƒ¢ îˆ  î‚¿îƒŠîƒ†î„›î„î„îƒºî„Ÿî‰Š
îˆžî„Ÿî„¦î‰¨îƒœîƒµî„î„î„› îƒœî‚¨îƒºîƒ¥îƒµî…… î„›î„î„îƒºî‰Š î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† î‚¨ îƒî„›îƒŠî‚¨î„¦
î„Ÿîƒ¥îƒ†îƒŠ î„Ÿî„¦î„›îƒŠîƒŠî„¦ îƒµî„îƒ€î‚¨î„¦îƒ¥î„îƒ»î‰‰
î¶î€î‚‚î€µî‚‚î¶ îŠîˆ îˆŸîˆ¦î‰Šîˆ¦îˆîˆ
î’îƒŠî„¿ îˆŸ î‚¿îƒŠîƒ†î„›î„î„îƒº îƒ€î„îƒ»îƒ†î„ î„¿îƒ¥î„¦îƒ¢ î‚¨ îƒî„›î‚¨îƒ»îƒ¥î„¦îƒŠ
îƒ³îƒ¥î„¦îƒ€îƒ¢îƒŠîƒ»î‰Š îƒ€îƒŠîƒ»î„¦î„›î‚¨îƒµ î‚¨îƒ¥î„›î‰Š îƒî‚¨î„Ÿ îƒ¢îƒŠî‚¨î„¦î‰Š îƒ»îƒŠî„¿
î„¿îƒ¥îƒ»îƒ†î„î„¿î„Ÿî‰Š î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† î„îƒœîƒœî‰¨î„Ÿî„¦î„›îƒŠîƒŠî„¦ î„˜î‚¨î„›îƒ³îƒ¥îƒ»îƒî‰‰
î¶î€î‚‚î€µî‚‚î¶ îŠîˆ îˆžîˆ¦î‰Šîˆ¦îˆîˆ
î€î„«î„Ÿî„¦îƒ¥îƒ» î€™î„î„«î„›î„¦ î„îƒœîƒœîƒŠî„›î„Ÿ î‚¨ îˆŸ î‚¿îƒŠîƒ†î„›î„î„îƒº
îƒ€î„îƒ»îƒ†î„ î„¿îƒ¥î„¦îƒ¢ îˆ¡ î„›î„î„îƒºî„Ÿî‰Š îƒœî„›îƒŠî„Ÿîƒ¢ î„˜î‚¨îƒ¥îƒ»î„¦î‰Š î‚¨îƒ»îƒ†
î‚¨îƒ» îƒ¥îƒ»îƒî„›î„î„«îƒ»îƒ† î„˜î„î„îƒµî‰‰
î€™î˜î‘î‘î˜î’î‘î˜î‚•î€£î¶î‰‰î€™î˜î‘
îˆ îˆ îˆ¢ î€™î€£î’î½î²î€îŒ î¶î½î²î€£î€£î½î‰Š î¶î€î‚‚î€µî‚‚î¶î‰Š î‘î€ î‹Š î‰œîˆ¤îˆ¥îˆžî‰ îˆŸîˆ îˆ î‰¨îˆ¤îˆ îˆîˆ
î¶î€î‚‚î€µî‚‚î¶ îŠîˆŸîˆ¢îˆî‰Šîˆîˆîˆ
î€™î„îƒ»î„¾îƒŠîƒ»îƒ¥îƒŠîƒ»î„¦îƒµî…… îƒµî„îƒ€î‚¨î„¦îƒŠîƒ† îˆ  î„›î„î„îƒº îƒ€î„îƒ»îƒ†î„
î„îƒœîƒœîƒŠî„›î„Ÿ îˆž î‚¿îƒŠîƒ†î„›î„î„îƒºî‰Š î„«î„˜îƒ†î‚¨î„¦îƒŠîƒ† îƒ³îƒ¥î„¦îƒ€îƒ¢îƒŠîƒ»
î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† î‚¿î‚¨î„¦îƒ¢î‰Š î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† îƒ»îƒŠî„¿ îƒœîƒµî„î„î„›îƒ¥îƒ»îƒî‰‰
î‹†îˆŸîˆîˆŸîˆ  î€˜î€ºî€º î€îƒœîƒœîƒ¥îƒµîƒ¥î‚¨î„¦îƒŠî„Ÿî‰Š îŒîŒî€™î‰‰ î€îƒ» îƒ¥îƒ»îƒ†îƒŠî„˜îƒŠîƒ»îƒ†îƒŠîƒ»î„¦îƒµî…… î„î„¿îƒ»îƒŠîƒ† î‚¨îƒ»îƒ† î„î„˜îƒŠî„›î‚¨î„¦îƒŠîƒ† îƒœî„›î‚¨îƒ»îƒ€îƒ¢îƒ¥î„ŸîƒŠîƒŠ î„îƒœ î€˜î€ºî€º î€îƒœîƒœîƒ¥îƒµîƒ¥î‚¨î„¦îƒŠî„Ÿî‰Š îŒîŒî€™î‰‰ î€˜îƒŠî„›îƒ³î„Ÿîƒ¢îƒ¥î„›îƒŠ î€ºî‚¨î„¦îƒ¢î‚¨î„¿î‚¨î…… î€ºî„îƒºîƒŠî¶îƒŠî„›î„¾îƒ¥îƒ€îƒŠî„Ÿ î‚¨îƒ»îƒ†
î„¦îƒ¢îƒŠ î€˜îƒŠî„›îƒ³î„Ÿîƒ¢îƒ¥î„›îƒŠ î€ºî‚¨î„¦îƒ¢î‚¨î„¿î‚¨î…… î€ºî„îƒºîƒŠî¶îƒŠî„›î„¾îƒ¥îƒ€îƒŠî„Ÿ î„Ÿî……îƒºî‚¿î„îƒµ î‚¨î„›îƒŠ î„›îƒŠîƒîƒ¥î„Ÿî„¦îƒŠî„›îƒŠîƒ† î„ŸîƒŠî„›î„¾îƒ¥îƒ€îƒŠ îƒºî‚¨î„›îƒ³î„Ÿ î„îƒœ î€™î„îƒµî„«îƒºî‚¿îƒ¥î‚¨ î€½îƒ»î„Ÿî„«î„›î‚¨îƒ»îƒ€îƒŠ î€™î„îƒºî„˜î‚¨îƒ»î……î‰Š î‚¨ î€˜îƒŠî„›îƒ³î„Ÿîƒ¢îƒ¥î„›îƒŠ î€ºî‚¨î„¦îƒ¢î‚¨î„¿î‚¨î…… î‚¨îƒœîƒœîƒ¥îƒµîƒ¥î‚¨î„¦îƒŠî‰‰
î€£î„šî„«î‚¨îƒµ î€ºî„î„«î„Ÿîƒ¥îƒ»îƒ î˜î„˜î„˜î„î„›î„¦î„«îƒ»îƒ¥î„¦î……î‰‰
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